CHARACTERISTICS
ARTHUR H. 5MITH, D.D.
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CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
Native Children in Courtyard
Turtle Monument.
Chinese Characteristics
BY
Arthur H. Smith
Twenty-two Years a Missionary of the American Board in Chins
Fifth Edition^ Revised, with Illustrations
New York Chicago Toronto
Fleming H. Revell Company
Publishers of Evangelical Literature
Copyright, 1894,
By Fleming H. Revell Company.
CONTENTS.
CHArTER PACK
List of Illustrations 7
Introduction 9
I. Face 16
II. Economy 19
III. Industry 27
IV. Politeness 35
V. The Disregard of Time 41
VI. The Disregard of Accuracy 48
VII. The Talent for Misunderstanding 58
VIII. The Talent for Indirection 65
IX. Flexible Inflexibility 74
X. Intellectual Turbidity 82
'XI. The Absence of Nerves 90
XII. Contempt for Foreigners 98
XIII. The Absence of Public Spirit 107
XIV. Conservatism 115
XV. Indifference to Comfort and Convenience 125
XVI. Physical Vitality 144
XVII. Patience and Perseverance 152
5
6 CONTENTS
CHAPTKH PAGB
XVIII. Content and Cheerfulness 162
XIX. Filial Piety 171
XX. Benevolence 186
XXI. The Absence of Sympathy 194
XXII. Social Typhoons 217
XXIII. Mutual Responsibility and Respect for Law . . . 226
XXIV. Mutual Suspicion 242
XXV. The Absence of Sincerity 266
XXVI. Polytheism, Pantheism, Atheism 287
XXVII. The Real Condition of China and Her Present
Needs 314
Glossary 331
Index 333
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.*
Frontispiece.
Tung-Chou Pagoda, near PtKiNG
A Memorial Arch
Native Children in Courtyard
Turtle Monument
FACING PAGE
A Chinese Kitchen, showing Method of Preparing Food ... 19
Passenger Boat on the Pei Ho, North China 30
Carpenters Sawing Large Timber 44
Chinese Performers in Stage Dress 54
A Peking Cart 60
Chinese Card-players 70
The Empress Dowager of China 98
A Chinese Barber 118
Engine Works and Yard at Hanyang 122
A Middle-Class Family in Winter Dress 127
Interior of a Mohammedan Mosque 171
Native Women Sewing and Weaving Lace 200
Four Generations 217
A Portion of the Great Chinese Wall 242
A Chinese Boys' School (Christian) 251
The Temple of Heaven, Peking 287
A Chinese Idol 300
Camel's-back Bridge, on the Grounds or the Emperor's
Summer Palace 318
* For the use of original photographs, from which engravings have been made
and here published for the first time, the author and publishers desire to acknowl-
edge their indebtedness to Miss J. G. Evans of Tung-Chou, for frontispiece and
illustrations facing pages 30, 44, 118, 171, 217, 242 and 300; and to the Rev. G. S.
Hays of Cbefoo, for illustrations facing pages 19, 70, 200, and 251.
Within the Four Seas all are brethren.
Confucian Analects, XII., v. 4.
The scientific study of Man is the most difficult of all branches
of knowledge.
O. IV. Holmes.
We are firm believers in the maxim that for all right judgment
of any man or thing it is useful — ^nay, essential — to see his
good qualities before pronoimcing on his bad.
Carlyle.
CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS,
INTRODUCTION.
A WITNESS when put upon the stand is expected to tell
the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.
Many witnesses concerning the Chinese have told the truth,
but perhaps few of them have succeeded in telling nothing-
but the truth, and no one of them has ever told the whole
truth. No single individual, whatever the extent of his knowl-
edge, could by any possibility know the whole truth about
the Chinese. The present volume of essays is therefore open
to objection from three different points of view.
First, it may be said that the attempt to convey to others
an idea of the real characteristics of the Chinese is vain.
Mr. George Wingrove Cooke, the China correspondent of the
London Times in 1857-58, enjoyed as good an opportunity
of seeing the Chinese under varied circumstances, and through
the eyes of those well qualified to help him to a just under-
standing of the people, as any writer on China up to that
time. In the preface to his published letters, Mr. Cooke
9
lo INTRODUCTION
apologises as follows for his failure to describe the Chinese
character: "I have, in these letters, introduced no elaborate
essay upon Chinese character. It is a great omission. No
theme could be more tempting, no subject could afford wider
scope for ingenious hypothesis, profound generalisation, and
triumphant dogmatism. Every small critic will probably
utterly despise me for not having made something out of
such opportunities. The truth is, that I have written several
very fine characters for the whole Chinese race, but having
the misfortune to have the people under my eye at the same
time with my essay, they were always saying something or
doing something which rubbed so rudely against my hypothe-
sis, that in the interest of truth I burnt several successive
letters. I may add that I have often talked over this matter
with the most eminent and candid sinologues, and have
always found them ready to agree with me as to the im^s-
sibility of a conception of Chinese character as a whole.
These difficulties, however, occur only to those who know the
Chinese practically ; a smart writer, entirely ignorant of the
subject, might readily strike off a brilliant and antithetical
analysis, which should leave nothing to be desired but truth.
Some day, perhaps, we may acquire the necessary knowledge
to give to each of the glaring .inconsistencies of a Chinaman's
mind its proper weight and influence in the general mass. At
present, I, at least, must be content to avoid strict definitions,
and to describe a Chinaman* by his most prominent qualities."
Within the past thirty years, the Chinese has made himself
a factor in the affairs of many lands. He is seen to be irre-
* It is a matter of surprise, and even more of regret, that this barba-
rous compound seems to have rooted itself in the English language, to the
exclusion of the proper word Chinese. We do not know of a foreign
periodical in China in which natives of that country are not constantly
called " Chinamen," nor of a single writer in the Empire who consistently
avoids the use of the term.
INTRODUCTION 11
pressible ; is felt to be incomprehensible. He cannot, indeed,
be rightly understood in any country but China, yet the im-
pression still prevails that he is a bundle of contradictions who
cannot be understood at all. But after all there is no ap-
parent reason, now that several hundred years of our ac- ' /v
quaintance with China have elapsed, why what is actually i
known of its people should not be co-ordinated, as well as '
any other combination of complex phenomena.
A more serious objection to this particular volume is that
the author has no adequate qualifications for writing, it. The
circumstance that a person has lived for twenty-two years in
China is no more a guarantee that he is competent to write
of the characteristics of the Chinese, than the fact that another
man has for twenty-two years been biuied in a silver mine is
a proof that he is a fit person to compose a treatise on metal-
lurgy, or on bi-metallism. China is a vast whole, and one
who has never even visited more than half its provinces, and
who has lived in but two of them, is certainly not entitled to
generalise for the whole Empire. These papers were origi-
nally prepared for the North- China Daily News of Shanghai,
with no reference to any wider circulation. Some of the
topics treated excited, however, so much interest, not only in
China, but also in Great Britain, in the United States, and in
Canada, that the author was asked to reproduce the articles
in a permanent form.*
A third objection, which will be offered by some, is that
parts of the views here presented, especially those which deal |
with the moral ch^acter of the Chinese, are misleading and
unjust.
It should be remembered, however, that impressions are
not like statistics which may be corrected to a fraction. They
* " Chinese Characteristics " was published in Shanghai in 1890; after
being widely circulated throughout China and the East, the edition was
exhausted more than two years ago.
I a INTRODUCTION
rather resemble photographic negatives, no two of which may
be ahke, yet each of them may present truthfully something
not observable in any of the rest. The plates on which the
photographs are taken differ ; so do the lenses, and the develop-
ers, and the resulting views differ too.
Many old residents of China, whose knowledge of the
country is very much greater than that of the writer, have ex-
pressed themselves as in substantial agreement with his opin-
ions, while others, whose judgment is entitled to equal respect,
think that a somewhat lighter coloiuing in certain parts would
increase the fidelity of the too "monochromatic" picture.
With this undoubtedly just criticism in mind, the work has
been revised and amended throughout. While the exigencies
of republication at this time have rendered convenient the
omission of one-third of the characteristics originally dis-
cussed, those that remain contain nevertheless the most im-
portant portions of the whole, and the chapter on Content and
Cheerfulness is altogether new.
There can be no vahd excuse for withholding commendation
from the Chinese for any one of the many good qualities which
they possess and exhibit. At the same time, there is a danger
of yielding to h j>riori considerations, and giving the Chinese
credit for a higher practical morality than they can justly claim
— an evil not less serious than indiscriminate condemnation.
It is related of Thackeray, that he was once asked how it hap-
pened that the good people in his novels were always stupid,
and the bad people clever. To this the great satirist replied
that he had no brains above his eyes. There is a wood-cut
representing an oak tree, in the outlines of which the observer
is invited to detect a profile of Napoleon on the island of
St. Helena, standing with bowed head and folded arms. Pro-
tracted contemplation frequently fails to discover any such
profile, and it would seem that there must be some mistake,
but when once it is clearly pointed out, it is impossible to look
INTRODUCTION 13
at the picture and not see the Napoleon too. In like manner,
many things are to be seen in China which do not at first
appear, and many of them once seen are never forgotten.
While it has been impossible to introduce a quaUf)dng clause
into every sentence which is general in its form, the reader is
expressly warned that these papers are not intended to be
generalisations for a whole Empire, nor yet comprehensive
abstracts of what foreigners have observed and experienced.
What they are intended to be is merely a notation of the im-
pression which has been made upon one observer, by a few
out of many " Chinese Characteristics." They are not meant
as a portrait of the Chinese people, but rather as mere outline
sketches in charcoal of some features of the Chinese people, as
they have been seen by that one observer. Taken together,
they constitute only a single ray, of which an indefinite number
are required to form a complete beam of white light. They ^ .^'
may also be considered as studies in induction, in which many
particulars taken from the experience not of the writer only,
but of various other individuals at various times, are grouped.
It is for this reason that the subject has been so largely treated
by exemplification.
Mr. Meadows, the most philosophical of the many writers
on China and the Chinese, expressed the opinion that the
best way to convey to the mind of another person a correct
idea of the genius of a foreign people would be to hand him '•'■^^"
for perusal a collection of notes, formed by carefully recording
great numbers of incidents which had attracted one's attention, ^
particularly those that seemed at all extraordinary, together
with the explanation of the extraordinary parts as given by
natives of the country.
From a sufficient number of such incidents a general prin-
ciple is inferred. The inferences may be doubted or denied,
but such particulars as are cited cannot, for that reason alone,
be set aside, being so far as they go truthful, and they must
14 INTRODUCTION
ultimately be reckoned with in any theory of the Chinese
character.
The difficulty of comparing Chinese with Anglo-Saxons will
be most strongly felt by those who have attempted it. To
such it will soon become evident that many things which
seem " characteristic " of the Chinese are merely Oriental
traits ; but to what extent this is true, each reader in the light
of his own experience must judge for himself.
It has been said that in the present stage of our intercourse
with Chinese there are three ways in which we can come to
some knowledge of their social life — by the study of their
novels, their ballads, and their ^lays. Each of these sources
of information doubtless has its worth, but there is likewise
a fourth, more valuable than all of them combined, a source
/ not open to every one who writes on China and the Chinese.
I It is the study of the family life of the Chinese in their own\
\ homes. As the topography of a district can be much better /
understood in the country than in the city, so it is with the
characteristics of the people. A foreigner may live in a Chi-
nese city for a decade, and not gain as much knowledge of
the interior life of the people as he can acquire by living twelve
months in a Chinese village. Next to the Family we must
regard the Village as the unit of Chinese social life, and it is
therefore from the standpoint of a Chinese village that these
papers have been written. They are of purpose not intended
to represent the point of view of a missionary, but that of an
I observer not consciously prejudiced, who simply reports what
' he sees. For this reason no reference is made to any charac-
teristics of the Chinese as they may be modified by Christian-
ity. It is not assumed that the Chinese need Christianity at
all, but if it appears that there are grave defects in their char-
'vacter, it is a fair question how those defects may be remedied.
The " Chinese question," as already remarked, is now far
more than a national one. It is international. There is rea-
INTRODUCTION ^5
son to think that in the twentieth century it will be an even ,
more pressing question than at present. The problem of the'
means by which so vast a part of the human race may be im-
proved cannot be without interest to any one who wishes
well to mankind. If the conclusions to which we may find
ourselves led are correct, they will be supported by a line of
argument heretofore too much neglected. If these conclusions
are wrong, they will, however supported, fall of themselves.
( It is many years since Lord Elgin's reply to an address
from the merchants of Shanghai, but his words are true and
pertinent to-day. " When the barriers which prevent free
access to the interior of the country shall have been removed.
Christian civihsation of the West will find itself face to face
not with barbarism, but with an ancient civilisation in many i
respects effete and imperfect, but in others not without claims
to our sympathy and respect. In the rivalry which will then
ensue. Christian civihsation will have to win its way among a
sceptical and ingenious people, by making it manifest that a
faith which reaches to heaven furnishes better guarantees for
pubhc and private morality than one which does not rise
above the earth."
CHAPTER I.
FACE.
AT first sight nothing can be more irrational than to call
JTx. that which is shared with the whole human race a " char-
acteristic " of the Chinese. But the word " face " does not in
China signify simply the front part of the head, but is Uterally
a compound novm of multitude, with more meanings than we
shall be able to describe, or perhaps to comprehend.
In order to understand, however imperfectly, what is meant
by " face," we must take account of the fact that as a race the
Chinese have a strongly dramatic instinct. The theatre may
almost be said to be the only national amusement, and the
Chinese have for theatricals a passion like that of the English-
man for athletics, or the Spaniard for bull-fights. Upon very
slight provocation, any Chinese regards himself in the light of
an actor in a drama. He throws himself into theatrical atti-
tudes, performs the salaam, falls upon his knees, prostrates him-
self and strikes his head upon the earth, under circumstances
which to an Occidental seem to make such actions super-
fluous, not to say ridiculous. A Chinese thinks in theatrical
terms. When roused in self-defence he addresses two or
three persons as if they were a multitude. He exclaims : " I
say this in the presence of You, and You, and You, who are all
here present." If his troubles are adjusted he speaks of him-
self as having " got off the stage " with credit, and if they are
not adjusted he finds no way to "retire from the stage." All
this, be it clearly understood, has nothing to do with realities.
x6
FACE 17
The question is never of facts, but always of form. If a fine
speech has been dehvered at the proper time and in the proper
way, the requirement of the play is met. We are not to go
behind the scenes, for that would spoil all the plays in the
world. Properly to execute acts like these in all the complex I
relations of life, is to have " face." To fail of them, to ignore ! i_.
them, to be thwarted in the performance of them, this is to \
" lose face." Once rightly apprehended, " face " will be found_|
to be in itself a key to the combination lock of many of the
most important characteristics of the Chinese.
It should be added that the principles which regulate " face "
and its attainment are often wholly beyond the intellectual
apprehension of the Occidental, who is constantly forgetting
the theatrical element, and wandering off into the irrelevant
regions of fact. To him it often seems that Chinese " face "
is not unlike the South Sea Island taboo, a force of undeniable
potency, but capricious, and not reducible to rule, deserving
only to be abohshed and replaced by common sense. At this
point Chinese and Occidentals must agree to disagree, for they
can never be brought to view the same things in the same
light. In the adjustment of the incessant quarrels which
distract every hamlet, it is necessary for the "peace-talkers"
to take as careful account of the balance of " face " as Euro-
pean statesmen once did of the balance of power. The object
in such cases is not the execution of even-handed justice,
which, even if theoretically desirable, seldom occurs to an — '
Oriental as a possibility, but such an arrangement as will dis-
tribute to all concerned " face '' in due proportions. The
same principle often obtains in the settlement of lawsuits, a \
very large percentage of which end in what may be called a ■
drawn game. -i
To offer a person a handsome present is to " give him face."
But if the gift be from an individual it should be accepted only
in part, but should seldom or never be altogether refused. A
1 8 CHINESE CH/1RACTERISTICS
few examples of the thirst for keeping face will suffice for illus-
iration. To be accused of a fault is to " lose face," and the
fact must be denied, no matter what the evidence, in order
to save face. A tennis-ball is missed, and it is more than sus-
pected that a coolie picked it up. He indignantly denies it,
but goes to the spot where the ball disappeared, and soon
finds it lying there (dropped out of his sleeve), remarking,
" Here is your ' lost ' ball." The waiting-woman who secreted
the penknife of a guest in her master's house afterwards dis-
covers it under the table-cloth, and ostentatiously produces it.
In each case " face " is saved. The servant who has care-
lessly lost an article which he knows he must replace or forfeit
an equivalent from his wages, remarks loftily, as he takes his
dismissal, " The money for that silver spoon I do not want,"
and thus his " face " is intact. A man has a debt owing to
him which he knows that he shall not collect ; but going to
the debtor, he raises a terrible disturbance, by which means
he shows that he knows what ought to be done. He does
not get the money, but he saves his " face," and thus secures
himself from imposition in the future. A servant neglects or
refuses to perform some duty. Ascertaining that his master
intends to tiun him off, he repeats his former offence, dismisses
himself, and saves his " face."
To save one's face and lose one's life would not seem to
us very attractive, but we have heard of a Chinese District
Magistrate who, as a special favour, was allowed to be be-
headed in his robes of office in order to save his face!
CHAPTER II.
ECONOMY.
THE word "economy" signifies the rule by which the house
should be ordered, especially with reference to the rela-
tion between expendittu"e and income. Economy, as we
understand the term, may be displayed in three several ways :
by limiting the number of wants, by preventing waste, and by
the adjustment of forces in such a manner as to make a little
represent a great deal. In each of these ways the Chinese
are pre-em.inenLly economical.
One of the first things which impress the traveller in China
is the extremely simple diet of the people. The vast bulk of
the population seems to depend upon a few articles, such as
rice, beans in various preparations, millet, garden vegetables,
and fish. These, with a few other things, form the staple of
countless millions, supplemented it may be on the feast-days,
or other special occasions, with a bit of meat.
Now that so much attention is given in Western lands to
the contrivance of ways in which to furnish nourishing food
to the very poor, at a minimum cost, it is not without interest
to learn the undoubted fact that, in ordinary years, it is in
China quite possible to furnish wholesome food in abundant
quantity at a cost for each adult of not more than two cents a
day. Even in famine times, thousands of persons have been
kept alive for months on an allowance of not more than a
cent and a half a day. This implies the general existence in
19
20 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
China of a high degree of skill in the preparation of food.
. Poor and coarse as their food often is, insipid and even re-
pulsive as it not infrequently seems to the foreigner, it is im-
possible not to recognise the fact that, in the cooking and
serving of what they have, the Chinese are past-masters of the
culinary art. In this particular, Mr. Wingrove Cooke ranked
them below the French, and above the English (and he might
have added the Americans). Whether they are really below
any one of these nationalities we are by no means so certain
as Mr. Cooke may have been, but their superiority to some
of them is beyond dispute. In the few simple articles which
we have mentioned, it is evident that even from the point of
view of the scientific physiologist, the Chinese have made a
wise choice of their staple foods. The thoroughness of their
mode of preparing food, and the great variety in which these
few constituents are constantly presented, are known to all
who have paid the least attention to Chinese cookery.
Another fact of extreme significance does not force itself
upon our notice, but can easily be verified. There is very
little waste in the preparation of Chinese food, and everything
is made to do as much duty as possible. What there is left
after an ordinary Chinese family have finished one of their
meals would represent but a fraction of the net cost of the
food. In illustration of this general fact, it is only necessary
to glance at the physical condition of the Chinese dog or cat.
On the leavings of human beings it is the unhappy function
of these animals to " live," and their lives are uniformly pro-
tracted at "a poor dying rate." The populations of new
countries are proverbially wasteful, and we have not the least
doubt that it would be possible to support sixty millions of
Asiatics in comparative luxury with the materials daily wasted
in a land like the United States, where a living is easily to
be had. But we should like to see how many human beings
could be fattened from what there is left after as many Chinese
ECONOMY 21
have " eaten to repletion," and the servants or children have
all had their turn at the remains! Even the tea left in the
cups is poured back into the teapot to be heated again.
It is a fact which cannot fail to force itself upon our notice .
at every turn, that the Chinese are not as a race gifted with ■ -vt^t'l-
that extreme fastidiousness in regard to food which is fre-j
quently developed in Western lands. All is fish that comes to
their net, and there is very little which does not come there
first or last. In the northern parts of China the horse, the
mule, the ox, and the donkey are in universal use, and in large
districts the camel is made to do full duty. Doubtless it will
appear to some of our readers that economy is carried too far,
when we mention that it is the general practice to eat all of
these animals as soon as they expire, no matter whether the
cause of death be an accident, old age, or disease. This is
done as a matter of course, and occasions no remark whatever,
nor is the habit given up because the animal may chance to
have died of some epidemic malady, such as the pleuro-pneu-
monia in cattle. Such meat is not considered so wholesome
as that of animals which have died of other diseases, and this
truth is recognised in the lower scale of prices asked for it,
but it is all sold, and is all eaten. Certain disturbances of
the human organisations into which such diseased meat has
entered are well recognised by the people, but it is doubtless
considered more economical to eat the meat at the reduced
rates, and run the risk of the consequences, which, it should
be said, are by no means constant. Dead dogs and cats are
subject to the same processes of absorption as dead horses,
mules, and donkeys. We have been personally cognisant of
several cases in which villagers cooked and ate dogs which
had been purposely poisoned by strychnine to get rid of
them. On one of these occasions some one was thoughtful
enough to consult a foreign physician as to the probable re-
sults, but as the animal was " already in the pot," the survivors
22 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
could not make up their minds to forego the luxury of a feast,
and no harm appeared to come of their indulgence!
Another example of Chinese economy in relation to the
preparation of food is found in the nice adjustment of the
material of the cooking-kettles to the exigencies of the requi-
site fuel. The latter is scarce and dear, and consists generally
of nothing but the leaves, stalks, and roots of the crops, mak-
ing a rapid blaze which quickly disappears. To meet the
deeds of the case the bottoms of the boilers are made as thin
as possible, and require very careful handhng. The whole
business of collecting this indispensable fuel is an additional
example of economy in an extreme form. Every smallest
child, who can do nothing else, can at least gather fuel. The
vast army of fuel-gatherers, which in the autumn and winter
overspread all the land, leave not a weed behind the hungry
teeth of their bamboo rakes. Boys are sent into the trees to
beat off with clubs the autumnal leaves, as if they were chest-
nuts, and even straws are scarcely allowed leisure to show
which way the wind blows, before some enterprising collector
has " seized " them.
Every Chinese housewife knows how to make the most of
her materials. Her dress is not in its pattern or its construc-
tion wasteful like those of her sisters in Occidental countries,
but all is planned to save time, strength, and material. The
tiniest scrap of foreign stuff is always welcome to a Chinese
woman, who will make it reappear in forms of utility if not of
beauty, of which a whole parliament of authoresses of " Do-
mestic Economies" would never have dreamed. What can-
not be employed in one place is sure to be just the thing
for another, and a mere trifle of bias stuff is sufficient for the
binding of a shoe. The benevolent person in London or New
York who gives away the clothing for which he has no further
use entertains a wild hope that it may not be the means of
making the recipients paupers, and so do more harm than
ECONOMY 23
good. But whoever bestows similar articles upon the Chinese,
though the stuifs which they use and the style of wear are so
radically different from oiu"s, has a well-grounded confidence
that the usefulness of those particular articles has now at last
begun, and will not be exhausted till there is nothing left of
them for a base with which other materials can unite.
The Chinese often present their friends with complimentary
inscriptions written on paper loosely basted upon a silk back-
ground. Basting is adopted instead of pasting, in order that
the recipient may, if he chooses, eventually remove the inscrip-
tion, when he will have a very serviceable piece of silk !
Chinese economy is exhibited in the transactions of retail
merchants, to whom nothing is too small for attention. A
dealer in odds and ends, for example, is able to give the pre-
cise number of matches in a box of each of the different kinds,
and he knows to a fraction the profit on each box.
Every scrap of a Chinese account-book is liable to be
utilised in pasting up windows, or in the covering of paper
lanterns.
rThe Chinese constantly carry their economy to the point of
depriving themselves of food of which they are really in need.
They see nothing irrational in this, but do it as a matter of
course. A good example is given in Dr. B. C, Henry's " The
Cross and the Dragon." He was carried by three coolies for
five hours a distance of twenty-three miles, his bearers then
returning to Canton to get the breakfast which was furnished
them. Forty-six miles before breakfast, with a heavy load
half the way, to save five cents!
In another case two chair coohes had gone with a chair
thirty-five miles, and were returning by boat, having had noth-
ing to eat since 6 a.m., rather than pay three cents for two
}arge bowls of rice. The boat ran aground, and did not reach
Canton till 2 p.m. next day. Yet these men, having gone
twenty-seven hours without food, carrying a load thirty-five
H Chinese characteristics
mfles, offered to take Dr. Henry fifteen miles more to Canton,
and but for his baggage would have done so !
Q Many of the fruits of Chinese economy are not at all pleas-
ing to the ^Vestemers, but we cannot help admitting the
genuine nature of the claim which may be built on them. In
parts of the Empire, especially (strange to say) in the north,
the children of both sexes roam around in the costume of the
Garden of Eden, for many months of the year. This comes
to be considered more comfortable for them, but the primary
motive is economy. The stridulous squeak of the vast army
of Chinese wheelbarrows is due to the absence of the few
drops of oil which might stop it, but which never do stop it,
because to those who are gifted with " an absence of nerves "
the squeak is cheaper than the oil. j
C\i a Japanese emigrates, it is specified in his contract that
he is to be furnished daily with so many gallons of hot water,
in which he may, according to custom, parboil himself. The
Chinese have their bathing-houses too, but the greater part of
the Chinese people never go near them, nor indeed ever saw
one. " Do you wash your child every day ? " said an inquisi-
tive foreign lady to a Chinese mother, who w:.,s &een throwing
shovelfuls of dust over her progeny, and then wiping it off
with an old broom. " Wash him every day ! " was the indig-
nant response; "he was never washed since he was born! "
To the Chinese generally, the motto could never be made
even intelligible which was put in his window by a dealer in
soap, " Cheaper than dirt."
The Chinese doubtless regard the average foreigner as it
is said the Italians do the English, whom they term "soap-
wasters." Washing of clothes in China by and for the Chi-
nese there certainly is, but it is on a very subdued scale, and
in comparison with what we call cleanliness it might almost
be left out of account. Economy of material has much to do
with this, as we cannot help thinking, tor many Chinese appre-
ECONOMY 25
date clean things as much as we do, and some of them are
models of neatness, albeit under heavy disadvantages.
It is due to the instinct of economy that it is generally im-
possible to buy any tool ready-made. You get the parts in a
"raw" shape, and adjust the handles, etc., yourselves. It is
generally cheaper to do this for one's self than to have it
done, and as every one takes this view of it, nothing is to be
had ready-made.
We have spoken of economical adjustments of material,
such as that found in ordinary houses, where a dim light, which
costs next to nothing, is made to diffuse its darkness over two
apartments by being placed in a hole in the dividing wall.
The best examples of such adjustments are to be found in
Chinese manufactures, such as the weaving of all kinds of
fabrics, working in pottery, metal, ivory, etc. Industries of
this sort do not seem to us to exemphfy ingenuity so much as
they illustrate Chinese economy. Many better ways can be
devised of doing Chinese work than the ways which they
adopt, but none which make insignificant materials go further
than they do with the Chinese. They seem to be able to do
almost everything by means of almost nothing, and this is a
characteristic generally of their productions, whether simple
or complex. It applies as well to their iron-foundries, on a
minute scale of completeness in a small yard, as to a cooking-
range of strong and perfect draft, made in an hour out of a
pile of mud bricks, lasting indefinitely, operating perfectly, and
costing nothing.
iNo better and more characteristic example of economy of
materials in accomphshing great tasks could be found, even
in China, than the arrangements, or rather the entire lack of
arrangements, for the handling of the enormous amount of
grain which is sent as tribute to Peking. This comes up the
Peiho from Tientsin, and is discharged at T'ung-chou. It
would surprise a " Corn Exchange " merchant to find that all
26 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
the machinery needed for unloading, measuring, and removing
this mountain of rice and millet is simply an army of coolies,
a supply of boxes made like a truiicated cone, which are the
" bushel " measures, and an indefinite number of reed mats.
Only this and nothing more. The mats are spread on the
ground, the grain is emptied, remeasured, sacked, and sent off,
and the mats being taken up, the Emperor's Com Exchange
is once more a mere mud-bank!
On an American tobacco plantation one of the heaviest ex-
penses is the building of the long and carefully constructed
sheds for drying. In Chinese tobacco farms there is for this
object no expense at all. The sheds are made of thatch, and
when they are worn out the old material is just as good for
fuel as the new. When the tobacco is picked, the stout, stiff
stalks are left standing. Straw ropes are stretched along these
stalks, and upon the ropes are hung the tobacco leaves, which
are taken in at night with the ropes attached, like clothes hung
to a line. For simplicity and effectiveness this device could
hardly be excelled.
Every observant resident in China would be able to add to
these illustrations of a Chinese social fact, but perhaps no
more characteristic instance could be cited than the case of
an old Chinese woman, who was found hobbling along in a
painfully slow way, and on inquiry of whom it was ascertained
that she was going to the home of a relative, so as to die in a
place convenient to the family graveyard, and thus avoid the
expense of coffin-bearers for so long a distance 1
CHAPTER III.
INDUSTRY.
INDUSTRY is defined as habitual diligence in any employ-
ment— steady attention to business. In this age of the
world industry is one of the most highly prized among the
virtues, and it is one which invariably commands respect.
The industry of a people, speaking roughly, may be said to
unite the three dimensions of length, breadth, and thickness ;
or, to use a different expression, it may be said to have two
qualities of extension, and one of intension. By the quality
of length, we mean the amount of time during which the in-
dustry is exercised. By the quality of breadth, we mean the
number of persons to whom the predicate of industrious may
be fairly applied. By intension, we mean the amount of
energy which is displayed in the " habitual dihgence," and in
" steady attention to business." The aggregate result will be
the product of these three factors. It is by no means always
the case that the impressions of the casual traveller and those
of the old residents are the same, but there can be little doubt,
that casual travellers, and residents of the longest standing,
will agree in a profound conviction of the diligence of the
Chinese people. The very first glance which a new-comer
gets of the Chinese, induces him to think that this people is
carrying out in social affairs the maxim which John Wesley
named as the rule for a successful church — "All at it, and
always at it." Idleness in China is not conspicuous. Every
one seems to be doing something. There are of covu^se plenty
27
28 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
of wealthy persons, albeit a mere microscopic fraction of the
whole community, who can abundantly live without doing any
work, but their life is not ordinarily of a kind which is exter-
nally visible to the foreigner. Wealthy people in China do
not commonly retire from business, but devote themselves to
it with the same kind and degree of attention as when they
were poor.
The Chinese classify themselves as Scholars, Farmers, Work-
men, and Merchants. Let us glance a*: each of these subdivi-
sions of society, and see what they have to say for the industry
of the people.
/"it is exceedingly difficult for Occidentals to enter sympa-
thetically into such a scheme of education as that of the
Chinese. Its gross defects are not Hkely to be overlooked,
but one feature of it is adapted to thrust itself on the attention
at all times — it has no real rewards, except for diligence. The
many back doors which are always open to those who have
the money to purchase degrees would seem well calculated to
dampen the ardour of any student, but such is not the main
Y effect of the sale of office. The complaint is made in all the
provinces that there are far more eligible candidates for every
position than there are positions to be filled. All the ex-
amination halls, from the lowest to the highest, seem to be
perpetually crowded, and the number of students who com-
pete in any single prefecture often rises to above ten thousand.
When we consider the amount of mental toil which the mere
entrance to any one of these examinations involves, we get a
vivid conception of the intellectual industry of the Chinese.
The traditional diligence of the standard heroes mentioned in
the Trimetrical Classic, who studied by the light of a glow-
worm, or who tied their books to the horns of the ox with
which they were ploughing, is imitated at the present day,
with various degrees of approximation, by thousands in all
parts of China. In many cases this industry begins to dis-
r^
INDUSTRY 39
appear with the initial success of the first degree, but the
Chinese do not consider such a one a scholar at all, but re-
serve this title of honour for those who keep on in the narrow
and thorny path, until at length their perseverance is crowned
with success. In what land but China would it be possible
to find examples of a grandfather, son, and grandson all com-
peting in the same examination for the same degree, age and
indomitable perseverance being rewarded at the age of eighty
years by the long-coveted honour ? ]
/*In the spring of 1889 various memorials appeared in the
Peking Gazette relating to aged candidates at the provincial
examinations. The Governor- General reported that at the
autumnal examination in Foochow nine candidates over eighty
years of age, and two over ninety, went through the prescribed
tests and sent in essays of which the composition was good
and the handwriting firm and distinct. Aged candidates, he
says, who have passed through an interval of sixty years from
attaining their bachelor's degree, and who have attended the
three last examinations for the higher, are, if unsuccessful the
fourth time, entitled to an honorary degree. The Governor
of Honan in like manner reported thirteen candidates over
eighty years of age, and one over ninety, who all "went
through the whole nine days' ordeal, and wrote essays which
were perfectly accurate in diction and showed no signs of fail-
ing years." But even this astonishing record was surpassed in
the province of Anhui, where thirty-five of the competitors
were over eighty years of age, and eighteen over ninety!
Could any other country afford a spectacle like this ?
If the life of the scholar in China is one of unremitting dili-
gence, that of the farmer is not less so. His work, like that of
a housekeeper, is never done. With the exception of a com-
paratively brief period in the middle of the winter, throughout
the northern provinces there never appears to be a time when
there is not only something to do, but a great deal of it
$0 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
Doubtless this is more or less true of farming everywhere,
but the Chinese farmer is industrious with an industry which
it would be difficult to surpass.
That which is true of the farmer class, is true with still
greater emphasis of the mere labourer, who is driven by the
constant and chronic reappearance of the wolf at his door to
spend his hfe in an everlasting grind. As the farmer bestows
the most painstaking thought and care upon every separate
stalk of cabbage, picking oR carefully each minute insect,
thus at last tiring out the ceaseless swarms by his own greater
perseverance, so does the labourer watch for the most insig-
nificant job, that he may have something for his stomach and
for his back, and for other stomachs and backs that are wholly
dependent upon him. Those who have occasion to travel
where cart-roads exist, will often be obliged to rise soon after
midnight and pursue their journey, for such, they are told, is
the custom. But no matter at what hour one is on the way,
there are small bodies of peasants patroUing the roads, with
fork in hand and basket on their back, watching for oppor.
tunities to collect a little manure. When there is no othei
work pressing, this is an invariable and an inexhaustible re-
source.
et is by no means uncommon to see those who are hard
ssed to find the means of support, following two different
lines of occupation which dovetail into each other. Thus the
boatmen of Tientsin, whose business is spoiled by the closing
of the rivers, take to the swift ice-sled, by which means it is
possible to be transported rapidly at a minimum cost. In the
same way, most of the rural population of some districts spend
all the time which can be spared from the exigencies of farm
work in making hats or in plaiting the braid, now so large an
article of export. Chinese women are not often seen without
a shoe-sole in their hands on which they are perpetually tak-
ing stitches, even while talking gossip at the entrance of their
u
INDUSTRY 3>
alleys ; or perhaps it is a reel of cotton which they are spinning.
But idle they are not.
/ The indefatigable activity of the classes which have been
named is well matched by that of the merchants and tlieir em-
ployes. The life of a merchant's clerk, even in Western lands,
is not that of one who holds a sinecm^e, but as compared with
that of a Chinese clerk it is comparative idleness. For to the
work of the latter there is no end. His hoHdays are few and
his tasks heavy, though they may be interspersed with periods
of comparative torpor.
Chinese shops are always opened early, and they close late.
The system of bookkeeping by a species of double entry ap-
pears to be so minute that the accountants are often kept
busy till a very late hour recording the sales and balancing
the entries. When nothing else remains to be done, clerks
can be set to sorting over the brass cash taken in, in quest of
rare coins which may be sold at a profit.
It is a matter of surprise that the most hard- worked class
of the Chinese race is that class which is most envied, and ; 1 \
into which every ambitious Chinese strives to raise himself — to
wit, the official. The number and variety of transactions with
which a Chinese official of any rank must occupy himself, and
for the success of which he is not only theoretically but very
practically responsible, is likewise surprising. How would our
Labom- Unions, who are so strenuous about the coming Eight
Hours a Day, relish a programme of a day's work such as the
following, which is taken from a statement made to an inter-
preter in one of the Foreign Legations in Peking by an emi-
nent Chinese statesman? <^I once asked a member of the
Chinese cabinet, who was complaining of fatigue and over-
work, for an account of his daily routine. He replied that he
left home every morning at two o'clock, as he was on duty
at the Palace from three to six. As a member of the Privy
Council, he was engaged in that body from six until nine.
32 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
From nine until eleven he was at the War Department, of
which he was President. Being a member of the Board of
Punishment, he was in attendance at the office of that body-
daily from twelve until two, and, as one of the senior Minis-
ters of the Foreign Office, he spent every day, from two till
five or six in the afternoon, there. These were his regular
daily duties. In addition to them he was frequently appointed
to serve on special boards or commissions, and these he sand-
wiched in between the others as he could. He seldom
reached home before seven or eight o'clock in the evening."
It is not strange to be told that this officer died six months
after this conversation, from overwork and exhaustion, nor is
it at all unlikely that the same state of things may put an end
to many careers in China the continuance of which would have
been valuable to the interests of the government.
The quality of extension, of which we have spoken, applies
to the number of those who are industrious, but it also applies
to the extent of time covered by that industry, which, as we
have seen, is very great. The Chinese day begins at a dim
period, often not at a great remove from midnight. The
Emperor holds his daily audiences at an hour when every
Court of Europe is wrapped in the embrace of Morpheus. To
an Occidental this seems simply inexplicable, but to a Chinese
it doubtless appears the most natural thing in the world. And
the conduct of the Son of Heaven is imitated more or less
closely by the subjects of the Son of Heaven, in all parts of his
Empire. The copper workers of Canton, the tinfoil workers
of Foochow, the wood-carvers of Ningpo, the rice-mill workers
of Shanghai, the cotton-cleaners and workers in the treadmill
for bolting flour in the northern provinces, may all be heard
late at night, and at a preposterous hour in the morning.
Long before daylight the traveller comes upon a countryman
who has already reached a distance of many miles from his
home, where he is posted in the darkness waiting for the com-
ing of dayhght, when he will begin the sale of his cabbages!
INDUSTRY 33
By the time an Occidental has had his breakfast, a Chinese
market is nearly over. There are few more significant con-
trasts than are suggested by a stroll along the principal street
in Shanghai, at the hour of half-past five on a summer's morn-
ing. The lordly European, who built those palaces which
hne the water-front, and who does his business therein, is
conspicuous by his total absence, but the Asiatic is on hand
in full force, and has been on hand for a long time. It will
be hours before the Occidentals begin to jostle the Chinese
from the sidewalks, and to enter with luxurious ease on their
round of work, and by that time the native will have finished
half his day's labour.
Sir John Davis was quite right in his comments on the
cheerful labour of the Chinese, as a sign that their government /^
has succeeded in sectu"ing them great content with their con-
dition. This quality of their labour is one of its most striking
characteristics, and to be comprehended must be long observed
and well weighed.
It remains to say a word of the quaUty of intension in Chi-
nese industry. The Chinese are Asiatics, and they work as
such. It is in vain to attempt to make over this virile race on
the model of our own. To us they certainly appear lacking
in the heartiness which we esteem so highly. The Anglo-
Saxon needs no scriptural hint to enable him to see the im-
portance of doing with his might what his hand finds to do,
but the Chinese cannot be made to change his pace, though ^
the combined religions and philosophy of the ages were >-(i iU^-
brought to bear upon him. He has profited by the accumu-
lated experience of millenniums, and, like the gods of Homer,
he is never in a hiury.
/' One cannot help forecasting a time when the white and the\ JCjui^-^ ■
yellow races will come into a keener competition than any yet | j|
known. When that ijieyitable day shall have arrived, whicly^ f^
of them will have to go to the wall?
Surely if Solomon was right in his economic maxim that
34 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
the hand of the diligent maketh rich, the Chinese ought to be
among the most prosperous of the peoples of the earth. And
so they doubtless would be, if there were with them a balance
of virtues, instead of a conspicuous absence of some of those
fundamental qualities which, however they may be enumerated
as " constant virtues," are chiefly " constant " in their absence.
When, by whatever means, these qualities of honesty and sin-
cerity shall have been restored to their theoretical place in the
Chinese moral consciousness, then (and not sooner) will the
Chinese reap the full reward of their unmatched Industry.
POLITENESS.
THERE are two quite different aspects in which the polite-
ness of the Chinese, and of Oriental peoples generally,
may be viewed — the one of appreciation, the other of criti-
cism. The Anglo-Saxon, as we are fond of reminding our-
selves, has, no doubt, many virtues, and among them is to be
found a very large percentage oifortiter in re, but a very small
percentage of suaviter in modo. When, therefore, we come to
the Orient, and find the vast populations of the immense Asi-
atic continent so greatly our superiors in the art of lubricating
the friction which is sure to arise in the intercourse of man
with man, we are filled with that admiration which is the tribute
of those who cannot do a thing to those who can do it easily
and well. The most bigoted critic of the Chinese is forced to
admit that they have brought the practice of politeness to a
pitch of perfection which is not only unknown in Western
lands, but, previous to experience, is unthought of and almost
unimaginable.
The rules of ceremony, we are reminded in the Classics, are
three hundred, and the rules of behaviour three thousand.
Under such a load as this, it would seem unreasonable to hope
for the continuance of a race of human beings, but we very
soon discover that the Chinese have contrived to make their
ceremonies, as they have made their education, an instinct
rather than an acquirement. The genius of this people h?.s
made the punctilio, which in Occidental lands is relegated to
35
,_^-*-
cJ.
36 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
the use of courts and to the intercourse of diplomatic hfe, a
part of the routine of daily contact with others. We do not
mean that in their everyday life the Chinese are bound by
such an intricate and complex mass of rules as we have men-
tioned, but that the code, Hke a set of holiday clothes, is always
to be put on when the occasion for it arises, which happens at
certain junctures the occurrence of which the Chinese recog-
nise by an unerring instinct. On such occasions, not to know
what to do would be for a Chinese as ridiculous as for an
educated man in a Western land not to be able to tell, on
occasion, how many nine times nine are.
The difficulty of Occidental appreciation of Chinese polite-
ness is that we have in mind such ideas as are embodied in
the definition which affirms that " politeness is real kindness
kindly expressed." So it may be in the view of a civilisation
which has learned to regard the welfare of one as (theoreti-
cally) the welfare of all, but in China pohteness is nothing of
this sort. It is a ritual of technicahties which, like all techni-
calities, are important, not as the indices of a state of mind or
of heart, but as individual parts of a complex whole. The
i entire theory and practice of the use of honorific terms, so
bewildering, not to say maddening, to the Occidental, is sim-
ply that these expressions help to keep in view those fixed re-
lations of graduated superiority which are regarded as essen-
tial to the conservation of society. They also serve as lubri-
cating fluids to smooth human intercourse. Each antecedent
has its consequent, and each consequent its antecedent, and
when both antecedent and consequent are in the proper place,
everything goes on well. It is like a game of chess in which
the first player observes, "I move my insignificant King's
pawn two squares." To which his companion responds, " I
move my hiunble King's pawn in the same manner." His
antagonist then announces, " I attack your honourable King's
pawn with my contemptible King's knight, to his King's
POLITENESS 37
bishop's mean third," and so on through the game. The
game is not affected by the employment of the adjectives, but
just as the chess-player who should be unable to announce his
next move would make himself ridiculous by attempting what
he does not understand, so the Chinese who should be igno-
rant of the proper ceremonial reply to any given move is the
laughing-stock of every one, because in the case of the Chinese
the adjectives are the game itself, and not to know them is
to know nothing.
At the same time, the rigidity of Chinese etiquette varies
directly as the distance from the centres at which it is most
essential, and when one gets among rustics, though there is
the same appreciation of its necessity, there is by no means
the familiarity with the detailed requirements which is found
in an urban population.
But it must at the same time be admitted that there are
very few Chinese who do not know the proper thing to be
done at a given time, incomparably better than the most culti-
vated foreigner, who, as compared with them, is a mere infant
in arms ; generally, unless he has had a long preliminary ex-
perience, filled with secret terror lest he should make a wrong
move, and thus betray the superficial nature of his knowledge.
It is this evident and self-confessed incapacity to comply with
the very alphabet of Chinese ceremonial politeness which
makes the educated classes of China look with such undis-
guised (and not unnatural) contempt on the " Barbarians,"
who do not understand " the round and the square," and who,
even when they have been made acquainted with the beauties
of the usages of polite life, manifest such disdainful indiffer-
ence, as well as such invincible ignorance.
Politeness has been likened to an air-cushion. There is
nothing in it, but it eases the jolts wonderfully. At the same
time it is only fair to add that the politeness which the Chinese
exercises to the foreigner (as well as much of that which he
3^ CHINESE CHAkACTERISTlCa
displays to his own people) is oftener prompted by a desire
to show that he really understands the proper moves to be
made, than by a wish to do that which will be agreeable to his
guest. He insists on making a fire which you do not want,
in order to steep for you a cup of tea which you detest, and
in so doing fills your eyes with smoke, and your throat with a
sensation of having swallowed a decoction of marshmallows ;
but the host has at least established the proposition that he
knows how a guest ought to be treated, and if the guest is not
pleased, so much the worse for the guest. In the same man-
ner the rural host, who thinks it is his duty to have the humble
apartment in which you are to be lodged, swept and (figura-
tively) garnished, postpones this process until you have already
arrived, and despite your entreaties to desist he will not, though
he put your eyes out by raising the dust of ages. The Book
of Rites teaches, perhaps, that a room shall be swept, and
swept it shall be, whatever the agonies of the traveller in the
process. The same rule holds at feasts, those terrors of the
uninitiated (and not seldom of the too initiated), where the
zealous host is particular to pile on your plate the things that
it is good for you to like, regardless of the fact that you do not
want them and cannot swallow a morsel of them. So nnnch
the worse for you, he seems to say, but of one thing he is
sure, he will not be lacking in his part. No one shall be able
to accuse him of not having made the proper moves at the
proper times. If the foreigner does not know the game, that
is his own affair, not that of the host.
It was upon this principle that a Chinese bride, whose duty
it had become to call upon a foreign lady, deliberately turned
her back upon the latter, and made her obeisance towards a
totally different quarter, to the amazement and annoyance of
her hostess. Upon subsequent inquiry it turned out that the
bride had performed her prostration to the north because that
is tlie direction of the abode of the Emperor, no attention
POLITENESS 39
being paid to the circumstance that the person to whom the
bride was supposed to be pa^ying her respects was on the
south side of the room. If the foreign lady did not know
enough to take her place on the proper side of the room, the
bride did not consider that any concern of hers ; she, at least,
would show that she knew in what direction to knock her
head!
Chinese politeness often assumes the shape of a gift. This,
as already remarked, gives the recipient " face." There are
certain stereotyped forms which such offerings take. One
who has much to do with the Chinese will be always liable to
deposits of packages, neatly tied up in red paper, containing a
mass of greasy cakes which he cannot possibly eat, but which
the giver will not take back, even though he is informed by
the unwilling recipient (driven to extremities) that he shall be
obliged to give them all to some other Chinese.
Chinese politeness by no means forbids one to " look a gift
horse in the mouth." One is often asked how much a present
cost him, and guests in taking leave of a host or hostess con-
stantly use the formula : " I have made you much trouble ; I
have forced you to sp«nd a great deal of money ! "
A foreigner who had been invited to a wedding, at which
bread-cakes are provided in abundance, observed that when
the feast was well advanced a tray was produced containing
only two or three bread-cakes, which were ostentatiously of-
fered as being hot (if any preferred them so). They were first
passed to the foreigner as the guest of honour, who merely
declined them with thanks. For some unexplained reason,
this seemed to throw a kind of gloom over the proceedings,
and the tray was withdrawn without being passed to any one
else. It is the custom for each guest at a wedding to con-
tribute a fixed sum towards the expenses of the occasion. It
was the usage of this locality to collect these contributions
while the guests were still at the table, but as it would not
40 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
conform to Chinese ideas of propriety to ask a guest for his
offering, it was done under the guise of passing him hot bis-
cuit. Every one understood this pohte fiction except the ill-
informed foreigner, whose refusal rendered it improper for any
one else to make his contribution at that time. At a subse-
quent wedding to which he was invited in the same family,
this foreigner was interested in hearing the master of cere-
monies, taught by dear experience, remark to the guests with
more than Occidental directness, " This is the place for those
who have accounts to come in and settle them ! "
After all abatements have been made for the tediously
minute and often irksome detail of trifles of which Chinese
politeness takes account, for all of which it prescribes regula-
tions, it still remains true that we have much to learn from the
Chinese in the item of social intercourse. It is quite possible
to retain our sincerity without retaining all our brusqueness,
and the sturdy independence of the Occident would be all
the better for the admixture of a certain amount of Oriental
suavity.
There are, however, many Occidentals who could never be
brought to look at the matter in this light. An acquaintance
of the writer's resided for so many years in Paris that he had
unconsciously adopted the manners of that capital. When at
length he returned to London, he was in the habit of removing
his hat, and making a courteous bow to every friend whom he
met. Upon one occasion, one of the latter returned his salu-
tations with the somewhat unsympathetic observation, " See
here, old fellow, none of your French moikey tricks here ! "
Happy the man who is able to combine all that is best in the
East and in the West, and who can walk securely along the
narrow and often thorny path of the Golden Mean.
CHAPTER V.
THE DISREGARD OF TIME.
IT is a maxim of the developed civilisation of our day,
"time is money." The complicated arrangements of
modem life are such that a business man in business hours is
able to do an amount and variety of business which, in the
past centiuy, would have required the expenditure of time in-
definitely greater. Steam and electricity have accomplished
this change, and it is a change for which the Anglo-Saxon
race was prepared beforehand by its constitutional tendencies.
Whatever may have been the habits of our ancestors when
they had little or nothing to do but to eat, drink, and fight,
we find it difficult to imagine a period when our race was not
characterised by that impetuous energy which ever drives the
indixaduals of it onward to do something else, as soon as
another something is finished.
There is a significant difference in the salutations of the
Chinese and of the Anglo-Saxon. The former says to his
comrade whom he casually meets, " Have you eaten rice ? "
The latter asks, " How do you do ? " Doing is the normal
condition of the one, as eating is the normal condition of the
other. From that feeling which to us has become a second
nature, that time is money, and under ordinary circumstances
is to be improved to its final second, the Chinese, like most
Orientals, are singularly free. There are only twelve hours in
the Chinese day, and the names of these hours do not desig-
nate simply the point where one of them gives place to anotheTi
41
4* CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
but denote as well all the time covered by the twelfth part of
a day which each of them connotes. In this way the term
" noon," which would seem as definite as any, is employed of
the entire period from eleven to one o'clock. " What time is
/t," a Chinese inquired in our hearing, " when it is noon by the
moon? " Phrased in less ambiguous language, the question
which he intended to propound was this : " What is the time
of night when the moon is at the meridian ? "
Similar uncertainties pervade almost all the notes of time
which occur in the language of everyday life. " Sunrise "
and "sunset" are as exact as anything in Chinese can be
expected to be, though used with much latitude (and much
longitude as well), but " midnight," like " noon," means noth-
ing in particular, and the ordinary division of the night by
"watches" is equally vague, with the exception of the last
one, which is often associated with the appearance of daylight.
Even in the cities the " watches " are of more or less uncertain
duration. Of the portable time-pieces which we designate by
this name, the Chinese as a people know nothing, and few of
those who really own watches govern their movements by
them, even if they have the watches cleaned once every few
years and ordinarily keep them running, which is not often
the case. The common people are quite content to tell their
time by the altitude of the sun, which is variously described
as one, two, or more " flagstaflfs," or if the day is cloudy a
general result can be arrived at by observing the contraction
and dilatation of the pupil of a cat's eye, and such a result is
quite accurate enough for all ordinary purposes.
The Chinese use of time corresponds to the exactness of
their measures of its flight. According to the distinction
described by Sydney Smith, the world is divided into two
classes of persons, the antediluvians and the post-diluvians.
Among the latter the discovery has been made that the age
of man no longer runs into the centuries which verge on a
THE DISREGARD OF TIME 43
millennium, and accordingly they study compression, and
adaptation to their environment. The antedilu^ ians, on the
contrary, cannot be made to realise that the da} s of Methu-
saleh have gone by, and they continue to act as if life were /^
still laid out on the patriarchal plan.
Among these " antediluvians " the Chinese are to be reck-
oned. A good Chinese story-teller, such as are employed in
the tea-shops to attract and retain customers, reminds one of
Tennyson's " Brook." Men may come and men may go, but
he goes on "forever ever." The same is true of theatrical
exhibitions, which sometimes last for days, though they fade
into insignificance in comparison with those of Siam, where
we are assured by those who claim to have survived one of
them that they are known to hold for two months together!
The feats of Chinese jugglers when well done are exceedingly
clever and very amusing, but they have one fatal defect — ^they
are so long drawn out by the prolix and inane conversation of
the participants, that long before the jugglers finish, the for-
eign spectator will have regretted that he ever weakly con-
sented to patronise them. Not less formidable, but rather far
more so, are the interminable Chinese feasts, with their almost
incredible number and variety of courses, the terror and de-
spair of all foreigners who have experienced them, although
to the Chinese these entertainments seem but too short. One
of their most pensive sayings observes that " there is no feast
in the world which must not break up at last," though to the
unhappy barbarian lured into one of these traps this hopeful
generality is often lost in despair of the particular.
From his earliest years, the Chinese is thoroughly accus-
tomed to doing everything on the antediluvian plan. When
he goes to school, he generally goes for the day, extending to
all the period from sunrise to dark, with one or two inter-
missions for food. Of any other system, neither pupils nor
master have ever heard. The examinations for degrees are
44 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
protracted through several days and nights, with all grades
of severity, and while most of the candidates experience much
inconvenience from such an irrational course, it would be
difficult to convince any of them of its inherent absurdity as a
test of intellectual attainments.
The products of the minds of those thus educated are redo-
lent of the processes through which they have passed. The
Chinese language itself is essentially antediluvian, and to over-
take it requires the hfetime of a Methusaleh. It is as just to
say of the ancient Chinese as of the ancient Romans, that if
they had been obliged to learn their own language they would
never have said or written anything worth setting down!
Chinese histories are antediluvian, not merely in their attempts
to go back to the ragged edge of zero for a point of depart-
ure, but in the interminable length of the sluggish and turbid
current which bears on its bosom not only the mighty vegeta-
tion of past ages, but wood, hay, and stubble past all reckon-
ing. None but a relatively timeless race could either compose
or read such histories ; none but the Chinese memory could
store them away in its capacious " abdomen."
Chinese disregard of time is manifested in their industry,
the quality of intension in which we have already remarked to
be very different from that in the work of Anglo-Saxons.
How many of those who have had the pleasure of building
a house in China, with Chinese contractors and workmen,
thirst to do it again? The men come late and go early.
They are perpetually stopping to drink tea. They make long
journeys to a distant lime-pit carrying a few quarts of liquid
mud in a cloth bag, when by using a wheelbarrow one man
could do the work of three ; but this result is by no means the
one aimed at. If there is a slight rain all work is suspended.
There is generally abundant motion with but little progress,
so that it is often difficult to perceive what it is which repre-
sents the day's " labour " of a gang of men. We have known
<
THE DISREGARD OF TIME 45
a foreigner, dissatisfied with the slow progress of his carpen-
ters in lathing, accomplish while they were eating their dinner
as much work as all four of them had done in half a day.
The mere task of keeping their tools in repair is for Chinese
workmen a serious matter in expenditure of time. If the tools
belong to the foreigner, however, there is no embarrassment
on this score. They are broken mysteriously, and yet no one
has touched them. JVon est inventus is the appropriate motto
for them all. Poles and small rafters are pitched over the
wall, and all the neighbourhood loins appear to be girded with
the rope which was purchased for supporting the staging.
During the entire progress of the work, each day is a crisis.
All previous experience goes for nothing. The sand, the lime,
the earth of this place will not do for any of the uses for
which sand, lime, and earth are in general supposed to be
adapted. The foreigner is helpless. He is aptly represented
by Gulliver held down by threads, which, taken together,
are too much for him. Permanently have we enshrined in
our memory a Cantonese contractor, whose promises, hke his
money, vanished in smoke, for he was unfortunately a victim
of the opium pipe. At last, forbearance having ceased to be a
virtue, he was confronted with a formidable bill of particulars
of the things wherein he had come short. " You were told the
size of the glass. You meastu"ed the windows three several
times. Every one of those you have made is wrong, and they
are useless. Not one of your doors is properly put together.
There is not an ounce of glue about them. The flooring-
boards are short in length, short in number, full of knot-holes,
and wholly unseasoned." After the speaker had proceeded in
this way for some time, the mild-mannered Cantonese gazed
at him sadly, and when he brought himself to speak he re-
marked, in a tone of gentle remonstrance : " Don't say datl
Don't say dat! No ge?itleman talk like dat I "
To the Chinese the chronic impatience of the Anglo-Saxon
46 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
is not only unaccountable, but quite unreasonable. It has
been wisely suggested that they consider this trait in our
character as objectionable as we do their lack of sincerity.
In any case, appreciation of the importance of celerity and
promptness is difficult to cultivate in a Chinese. We have
known a bag full of foreign mail detained for some days
between two cities twelve miles apart, because the carrier's
donkey was ailing and needed rest! The administration of
the Chinese telegraph system is frequently a mere travesty of
what it might be and ought to be.
But in no circumstances is Chinese indifference to the lapse
of time more annoying to a foreigner than when the occasion
is a mere social call. Such calls in Western lands are recog-
nised as having certain limits, beyond which they must not be
protracted. In China, however, there are no hmits. As long
as the host does not offer his guest accommodations for the
night, the guest must keep on talking, though he be expiring
with fatigue. In calling on foreigners the Chinese can by no
possibility realise that there is an element of time, which is
precious. They will sit by the hour together, offering few or
no observations of their own, and by no means offering to
depart. The excellent pastor who had for his motto the say-
ing, "The man who wants to see me is the man I want to
see," would have modified this dictum materially had he lived
for any length of time in China. After a certain experience
of this sort, he would not improbably have followed the ex-
ample of another busy clergyman, who hung conspicuously in
his study the scriptural motto, "The Lord bless thy goings
out / " The mere enunciation of his business often seems to
cost a Chinese a mental wrench of a violent character. For
a long time he says nothing, and he can endure this for a
period of time sufficient to wear out the patience of ten Euro-
peans. Then, when he begins to speak, he realises the truth
of *« adage which declares that "it is easy to go on the
THE DISREGARD OF TIME 47
mountains to fight tigers, but to open your mouth and out
with a thing — tliis is hard!" Happy is the foreigner situated
hke the late lamented Dr. Mackenzie, who, finding that his
incessant relays of Chinese guests, the friends " who come but
never go," were squandering the time which belonged to his
hospital work, was wont to say to them, " Sit down and make
yourselves at home ; I have urgent business, and must be ex-
cused." And yet more happy would he be if he were able to
imitate the naive terseness of a student of Chinese who, hav-
ing learned a few phrases, desired to experiment with them on
the teacher, and who accordingly filled him with stupefaction
by remarking at the end of a lesson, " Open the door! Go I'*
THE DISREGARD OF ACCURACY.
( 'T^HE first impression which a stranger receives of the Chi-
-L nese is that of uniformity. Their physiognomy appears
to be all of one type, they all seem to be clad in one perpetual
blue, the " hinges " of the national eye do not look as if they
were "put on straight," and the resemblance between one
Chinese cue and another is the likeness between a pair of
peas from the same pod. But in a very brief experience the
tnost unobservant traveller learns that, whatever else may be
predicated of the Chinese, a dead level of uniformity cannot
be safely assumed. The speech of any two districts, no matter
how contiguous, varies in some interesting and perhaps unac-
countable ways. Divergences of this sort accumulate until
they are held to be tantamount to a new " dialect," and there
are not wanting those who will gravely assure us that in China
there are a great number of different "languages" spoken,
albeit the written character is the same. The same variations,
as we are often reminded, obtain in regard to customs, which,
according to a saying current among the Chinese, do not run
uniform for ten // together, a fact of which it is impossible not
to witness singular instances at every turn. A like diversity is
found to prevail in those standards of quantity upon the ab-
solute invariability of which so much of the comfort of life in
Western lands is found to depend.
The existence of a double standard of any kind, which is
4«
THE DISREGARD OF ACCURACY 49
often so keen an annoyance to an Occidental, is an equally
keen joy to the Chinese. Two kinds of cash, two kinds of
weights, two kinds of measures, these seem to him natural and
normal, and by no means open to objection. A man who
made meat dumplings for sale was asked how many of these
dumplings were made in a day ; to which he replied that they
used about " one hundred [Chinese] pounds of flour," the un-
known relation between tliis amount of flour and the number
of resultant dumplings being judiciously left to the inquirer to
conjecture for himself. In like manner, a farmer who is asked
the weight of one of his oxen gives a figure which seems much
too low, until he explains that he has omitted to estimate the
bones! A servant who was asked his height mentioned a
measure which was ridiculously inadequate to cover his length,
and upon being questioned admitted that he had left out of
account all above his shoulders! He had once been a soldier,
where the height of the men's clavicle is important in assign-
ing the carrying of biurdens. And since a Chinese soldier is
to all practical purposes complete without his head, this was
omitted. Of a different sort was the measiurement of a rustic
who affirmetl that he lived " ninety // from the city," but upon
cross-examination he consented to an abatement, as this was
reckoning both to the city and back, the real distance being,
as he admitted, only " forty-five // one way ! "
The most conspicuous instance of this variability in China
(s seen in the method of reckoning the brass cash, which con-
stitute tha only currency of the Empire. The system is every-
where a decimal one, which is the easiest of all systems to be
xeckoned, but no one is ever siu-e, until he has made particular
enquiries, what number of pieces of brass cash are expected in
my particular place to pass for a hundred. He will not need
to extend his travels over a very large part of the eighteen
provinces to find that this number varies, and varies with a
ia'arlessness that nothing can explain, from the full hundred
50 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
which is the theoretical " string," to 99, 98, 96, 83 (as in the
capital of Shansi), down to 33, as in the eastern part of the
province of Chihli, and possibly to a still lower number else-
where. The same is true, but in a more aggravated degree,
of the weight by which silver is sold. No two places have
the same " ounce," unless by accident, and each place has a
great variety of different ounces, to the extreme bewilderment
of the stranger, the certain loss of all except those who deal
in silver, and the endless vexation of all honest persons, of
whom there are many, even in China. The motive for the
perpetuation of this monetary chaos is obvious, but we are at
present concerned only with the fact of its existence.
The same holds true universally of measures of all sorts.
The bushel of one place is not the same as that of any other,
and the advantage which is constantly taken of this fact in
the exactions connected with the grain tax would easily cause
political disturbances among a less peaceable people than the
Chinese. So far is it from being true that " a pint is a pound
the world around," in China a " pint " is not a pint, nor is a
" pound " a pound. Not only does the theoretical basis of
each vary, but it is a very common practice (as in the salt
monopoly, for example) to fix some purely arbitrary standard,
such as twelve ounces, and call that a pound (catty). The
purchaser pays for sixteen ounces and receives but twelve,
but then it is openly done and is done by all dealers within
the same range, so that there is no fraud, and if the people
think of it at all, it is only as an " old-time custom " of the
salt trade. A similar uncertainty prevails in the measurement
of land. In some districts the " acre " is half as large again
as in others, and those who happen to live on the boundary
are obliged to keep a double set of measuring apparatus, one
for each kind of "acre,"
It is never safe to repeat any statement (as travellers in
China are constantly led to do) in regard to the price of each
THE DISREGARD OF ACCURACY $1
"catty" of grain or cotton, until one has first informed him-
self what kind of " catty " they have at that point. The same
holds as to the amount of any crop yielded per " acre," statis-
tics of which are not infrequently presented in ignorance of
the vital fact that " acre " is not a fixed term. That a like
state of things prevails as to the terms employed to measure
distance, every traveller in China is ready to testify. It is
always necessary in land travel to ascertain, when the distance
is given in " miles " (//), whether the " miles " are " large " oi
not! That there is some basis for estimates of distances w^
do not deny, but what we do deny is that these estimates or
measurements are either acciu^ate or uniform. It is, so far as
we know, a universal experience that the moment one leaves
a great imperial highway the " miles " become " long." If 1 20
// constitute a fair day's jom^ney on the main road, then on
country roads it will take fully as long to go 1 00 //, and in the
mountains the whole day will be spent in getting over 80 //.
Besides this, the method of reckoning is frequently based, not
on absolute distance, even in a Chinese sense, but on the rela-
tive difiiculty of getting over the ground. Thus it will be
"ninety //" to the top of a mountain the summit of which
would not actually measxu-e half that distance from the base,
and this number will be stoutly held to, on the ground that it
is as much trouble to go this "ninety //" as it would be to do
that distance on level ground. Another somewhat peculiar
fact emerges in regard to linear measurements, namely, that
the distance from A to B is not necessarily the same as the
distance from B to A ! It is vain to cite EucHdian postulates
that "quantities which are equal to the same quantity are
equal to each other." In China this statement requires to be
modified by the insertion of a negative. We could name a
section of one of the most important highways in China, which
from north to south is 183 // in length, while from south to
north it is 190 //", and singularly enough, this holds true no
5* CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
matter how often you travel it or how carefully the tally is
kept!*
Akin to this is another intellectual phenomenon, to wit, that
in China it is not true that the " whole is equal to the sum of
all its parts." This is especially the case in river travel. On
inquiry you ascertain that it is " forty // " to a point ahead.
Upon more careful analysis, this " forty " turns out to be com-
posed of two " eighteens," and you are struck dumb with the
statement that " four nines are forty, are they not ? " In the
* Since this was written, we have met in Mr. Baber's " Travels in West-
ern China " with a confirmation of the view here taken. " We heard, for
instance, with incredulous ears, that the distance between two places
depended upon which end one started from ; and all the informants,
separately questioned, would give the same differential estimate. Thus
from A to B would be unanimously called one mile, while from B to A
vould, with equal unanimity, be set down as three. An explanation
of this offered by an intelligent native was this : Carriage is paid on a
basis of so many cash per mile, it is evident that a coolie ought to be paid
at a higher rate if the road is uphill. Now it would be very troublesome
to adjust a scale of wages rising with the gradients of the road. It
is much more convenient for all parties to assume that the road in diffi-
cult or precipitous places is longer. This is what has been done, and
these conventional distances are now all that the traveller will succeed in
ascertaining. ' But, ' I protested, ' on the same principle, wet weather
must elongate the road, and it must be farther by night than by day.'
' Very true, but a little extra payment adjusts that.' This system may be
convenient for the natives, but the traveller finds it a continual annoy-
ance. The scale of distances is something like this: On level ground,
one statute mile is called two li ; on ordinary hill roads, not very steep,
one mile is called five /// on very steep roads, one mile is called fifteen
li. The natives of Yunnan, being good mountaineers, have a tendency
to underrate the distance on level ground, but there is so little of it
in their country, that the future traveller need scarcely trouble himself
with the consideration. It will be sufficient to assume five local //', except
in very steep places, as being one mile."
In Mr. Little's " Through the Yang-tse Gorges," he mentions a stage
which down the river was called ninety //, while up-stream it was 120 //.
He estimates 3.62 li to a statute mile, or 250 to a degree of latitude.
THE DISREG/IRD OF /ICCURACY S3
same manner, " three eighteens " make " sixty," and so on
generally. We have heard of a case in which an imperial
courier failed to make a certain distance in the limits of time
allowed by rule, and it was set up in his defence that the
"sixty li" were "large." As this was a fair plea, the magis-
trate ordered the distance measured, when it was found that
it was in reality " eighty-three //," and it has continued to be
so reckoned ever since.
Several villages scattered about at distances from a city
varying from one // to six, may each be called " The Three-
Li Village." One often notices that a distance which would
otherwise be reckoned as about a H, if there are houses on
each side of the road, is called five //, and every person in that
hamlet will gravely assure us that such is the real length of the
street.
Under these circumstances, it cannot be a matter of sur-
prise to find that the regulation of standards is a thing which
each individual undertakes for himself. The steel-yard maker
perambulates the street, and puts in the little dots (called
" stars ") according to the preferences of each customer, who
will have not less than two sets of balances, one for buying
and one for selling. A ready-made balance, unless it might
be an old one, is not to be had, for the whole scale of stand-
ards is in a fluid condition, to be solidified only by each suc-
cessive purchaser.
The same general truth is illustrated by the statements in
regard to age, particularity in which is a national trait of the
Chinese. While it is easy to ascertain one's age with exact-
ness, by the animal governing the year in which he was bom,
and to which he therefore " belongs," nothing is more com-
mon than to hear the wildest approximation to exactness. An
old man is " seventy or eighty years of age," when you know
to a certainty that he was seventy only a year ago. The
fact is, that in China a person becomes " eighty " the moment
54 . CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
he stops being seventy, and this " general average " must be
allowed for, if precision is desired. Even when a Chinese in-
tends to be exact, it will often be found that he gives his age
as it will be after the next New- Year's day — the national birth-
day in China. The habit of reckoning by " tens " is deep-
seated, and leads to much vagueness. A few people are " ten
or twenty," a " few tens," or perhaps " ever so many tens,"
and a strictly accurate enumeration is one of the rarest of ex-
periences in China. The same vagueness extends upwards
to "hundreds," "thousands," and "myriads," the practical
limit of Chinese counting. For greater accuracy than these
general expressions denote, the Chinese do not care.
An acquaintance told the writer that two men had spent
" 200 strings of cash " on a theatrical exhibition, adding a
moment later, " It was 173 strings, but that is the same as 200
— is it not ? "
Upon their departure for the home land, a gentleman and
his wife who had lived for several years in China, were pre-
sented by their Chinese friends with two handsome scrolls,
intended not for themselves but for their aged mothers — the
only surviving parents — who happened to be of exactly the
same age. One of the inscriptions referred to " Happiness,
great as the sea," and to " Old age, green as the perpetual
pines," with an allusion in smaller characters at the side to the
fact that the recipient had attained " seven decades of felicity."
The other scroll contained flowery language of a similar char-
acter, but the small characters by the side comphmented the
lady on having enjoyed " six decades of glory." After duly
admiring the scrolls, one of the persons whose mother was
thus honoured, ventured to inquire of the principal actor in
the presentation, why, considering the known parity of ages
of the two mothers, one was assigned seventy years, and the
other only sixty. The thoroughly characteristic reply was
given, that to indite upon each of two such scrolls the identi*
THE DISREGARD OF ACCURACY 55
cal legend, " seven decades," would look as if the writers were
entirely destitute of originality !
Chinese social sohdarity is often fatal to what we mean by
accuracy. A man who wished advice in a lawsuit told the
writer that he himself " lived " in a particular village, though
it was obvious from his narrative that his abode was in the
suburbs of a city. Upon inquiry, he admitted that he did
not now live in the village, and further investigation revealed
the fact that the removal took place nineteen generations ago !
" But do you not almost consider yourself a resident of the
city now ? " he was asked. " Yes," he replied simply, " we do
live there now, but the old root is in that village ! "
Another individual called the writer's attention to an ancient
temple in his own native village, and remarked proudly, "/
built that temple." Upon pursuing the subject, it appeared
that the edifice dated from a reign in the Ming Dynasty, more
than three hundred years ago, when " I " only existed in the
potential mood.
One of the initial stumbling-block of the student of Chi-
nese is to find a satisfactory expressio l for identity, as distin-,
guished from resemblance. The whole Chinese system of
thinking is based on a line of assumptions different from those
to which we are accustomed, and they can ill comprehend;
the mania which seems to possess the Occidental to ascertain i
everything with unerring exactness. The Chinese does not
know how many families there are in his native village, and he
does not wish to know. What any human being can want to
know this number for is to him an insoluble riddle. It is " a
few hundreds," " several hundreds," or " not a few," but a fixed
and definite number it never was and never will be.
The same lack of precision which characterises the Chinese
use of numbers, is equally conspicuous in their employment of
written and even of printed characters. It is not easy to pro-
cure a cheap copy of any Chinese book which does not abound
56 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
in false characters. Sometimes the character which is em-
ployed is more complex than the one which should have been
used, showing that the error was not due to a wish to econo-
mise work, but it is rather to be credited to the fact that ordi-
narily accuracy is considered as of no importance. A like
carelessness of notation is met with in far greater abundance
in common letters, a character being often represented by an-
other of the same sound, the mistake being due as much to
illiteracy as to carelessness.
Indifference to precision is nowhere more flagrantly mani-
fested than in the superscription of epistles. An ordinary
Chinese letter is addressed in bold characters, to " My Father
Great Man," " Compassionate Mother Great Man," " Ances-
tral Uncle Great Man," "Virtuous Younger Brother Great
Man," etc., etc., generally with no hint as to the name of the
" Great Man " addressed.
It certainly appears singular that an eminently practical
people like the Chinese should be so inexact in regard to their
own personal names as observation indicates them to be. It
js very common to find these names written now with one
character and again with another, and either one, we are in-
formed, will answer. But this is not so confusing as the fact
that the same man often has several different names, his fam-
ily name, his " style," and, strange to say, a wholly different
one, used only on registering for admission to literary exam-
inations. It is for this reason not uncommon for a foreigner
to mistake one Chinese for two or three. The names of vil-
lages are not less uncertain, sometimes appearing in two or
even three entirely different forms, and no one of them is ad-
mitted to be more " right " than another. If one should be
an acknowledged corruption of another, they may be employed
interchangeably, or the correct name may be used in official
papers and the other in ordinary speech, or yet again, the
THE DISREGARD OF ACCURACY ST
corruption may be used as an adjective, forming vrith the
original appellation a compound title.
The Chinese are unfortunately deficient in the education
which comes from a more or less intimate aquaintance with
chemical formulae, where the minutest precision is fatally neces-
sary. The first generation of Chinese chemists will probably }
lose many of its number as a result of the process of mixing a
"few tens of grains" of something with "several tens of grains" I
of something else, the consequence being an unanticipated
earthquake. The Chinese are as capable of learning minute
accuracy in all things as any nation ever was — nay, more so,
for they are endowed with infinite patience — but what we have
to remark of this people is that, as at present constituted, they
are free from the quality of accuracy and that they do not
understand what it is. If this is a true statement, two infer-
ences would seem to be legitimate. First, much allowance
must be made for this trait in our examination of Chinese his-
torical records. We can readily deceive ourselves by taking
Chinese statements of numbers and of quantities to be what
they were never intended to be — exact. Secondly, a wide
margin must be left for all varieties of what is dignified with
the title of a Chinese "census." The whole is not greater
than its parts, Chinese enumeration to the contrary notwith-
standing. When we have well considered all the bearings of
a Chinese " census," we shall be quite ready to say of it, as
was remarked of the United States Supreme Court by a cannj
Scotchman who had a strong realisation of the "glorious
uncertainty of the law," that it has "the last guess at the
case! "
CHAPTER VII.
THE TALENT FOR MISUNDERSTANDING.
THIS remarkable gift of the Chinese people is first observed
when the foreigner knows enough of the language to
employ it as a vehicle of thought. To his pained surprise, he
finds that he is not understood. He therefore returns to his
studies with augmented diligence, and at the end of a series of
years is able to ventiure with confidence to accost the general
public, or any individual thereof, on miscellaneous topics. If
the person addressed is a total stranger, especially if he has
never before met a foreigner, the speaker will have opportu-
nity for the same pained surprise as when he made his maiden
speech in this tongue. The auditor evidently does not under-
stand. He as evidently does not expect to understand. He
visibly pays no attention to what is said, makes no effort
whatever to follow it, but simply interrupts you to observe,
"When you speak, we do not imderstand." He has a smile
of superiority, as of one contemplating the struggles of a deaf-
mute to utter articulate speech, and as if he would say, " Who
supposed that you could be understood? It may be your
misfortune and not your fault that you were not born with a
Chinese tongue, but you should bear your disabilities, and
not worry us with them, for when you speak we do not under-
stand you." It is impossible to retain at all times an unruffled
serenity in situations hke this, and it is natural to turn fiercely
on your adversary, and inquire, " Do you understand what I
58
THE TALENT FOR MISUNDERSTANDING 59
am saying at this moment ? " " No," he replies, " I do not
understand you ! "
Another stage in the experience of Chinese powers of mis-
understanding is reached when, although the words are dis-
tinctly enough apprehended, through a disregard of details the
thought is obscured even if not wholly lost. The " Foreigner
in Far Cathay " needs to lay in a copious stock of phrases
which shall mean, " on this condition," " conditionally," " with
this understanding," etc., etc. It is true that there do not
appear to be any such phrases, nor any occasion for them felt
by the Chinese, but with the foreigner it is different. The
same is true in regard to the notation of tenses. The Chinese
do not care for them, but the foreigner is compelled to care
for them.
Of all subjects of human interest in China, the one which
most needs to be guarded against misunderstanding is money.
If the foreigner is paying out this commodity (which often ap-
pears to be the principal function of the foreigner as seen from
the Chinese standpoint) a future-perfect tense is "a military
necessity." " When you shall have done your work, you will
receive yoiur money." But there is no future-perfect tense in
Chinese, or tense of any description. A Chinese simply says,
" Do work, get money," the last being the principal idea which
dwells in his mind, the " time relation " being absent. Hence
when he is to do anything for a foreigner he wishes his money
at once, in order that he may " eat," the presumption being
that if he had not stumbled on the job of this foreigner he
would never have eaten any more! Eternal vigilance, we
must repeat, is the price at which immunity from misunder-
standings about money is to be purchased in China. Who is
and who is not to receive it, at what times, in what amounts,
whether in silver ingots or brass cash, what quality and weight
of the former, what number of the latter shall pass as a
" string " — these and other hke points are those in regard to
6o CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
which it is morally impossible to have a too definite and fixed
understanding. If the matter be a contract in which a builder,
a compradore, or a boatman is to do on his part certain things
and furnish certain articles, no amount of preliminary precision
and exactness in explanations will come amiss.
To "cut off one's nose to spite one's face" is in China
a proceeding too common to attract the least attention. A
boatman or a carter who is engaged to go wherever the for-
eigner who hires his boat may direct, sometimes positively
refuses to fulfil his contract. The inflexible obstinacy of a
Chinese carter on such occasions is aptly illustrated by the
behaviour of one of his mules, which, on coming to a particu-
larly dusty place in the road, lies down with great deliberation
to its dust-bath. The cartel meantime lashes the mule with
his whip to the utmost limit of his strength, but in vain. The
mule is as indifferent as if a fly were tickling it. In consider-
ing the phenomena to which this is analogous, we have been
frequently reminded of the caustic comments of De Quincey,
in which, with a far too sweeping generalisation, he aflSrms
that the Chinese race is endued with " an obstinacy like that
of mules." The Chinese are not obstinate like mules, for the
mule does not change his mood, while the same obstreperous
carter who defies his employer in the middle of his journey,
though expressly warned that his " wine-money " will be wholly
withheld should he persist, is at the end of the journey ready
to spend half a day in pleading and in prostrations for the
favour which at a distance he treated with contemptuous
scorn. That a traveller should have a written agreement with
his carters, boatmen, etc., is a matter of ordinary prudence.
No loophole for a possible misconstruction must be left open.
" Plain at first, afterwards no dispute " is the prudent apho-
rism of the Chinese. Yet the chances are that, after exhaust-
ing one's ingenuity in preliminary agreements, some occasion
for misunderstanding will arise. And whatever be his care on
u
k
THE TALEhIT FOR MISUNDERSTANDING 6l
tliis point, money will probably make the foreigner in China
more trouble than any other single cause. Whether the Chi-
nese concerned happen to be educated scholars or ignorant
cooHes, makes httle difference. All Chinese are gifted with an
instinct for taking advantage of misunderstandings. They
find them as a January north wind finds a crack in a door, as
the water finds a leak in a ship, instantly and without apparent
effort. The Anglo-Saxon race is in some respects singularly
adapted to develop this Chinese gift. As the ancient Persians
were taught principally the two arts of drawing the long bow
and speaking the truth, so the Anglo-Saxon is soon perceived
by the Chinese to have a talent for veracity and doing justice
as well towards enemies as towards friends. To the Chinese
these qualities seem as singular as the Jewish habit of suspend-
ing all military operations every seventh day, no matter how
hard-pressed they might be, must have appeared to the Ro-
mans under Titus, and the one eccentricity proves as useful to
the Chinese as the other did to the Romans.
Foreign intercourse with China for the century preceding
i860 was one long illustration of the Chinese talent for mis-
understanding, and the succeeding years have by no means
exhausted that talent. The history of foreign diplomacy with
China is largely a history of attempted explanations of matters
which have been deliberately misunderstood. But in these or
in other cases, the initial conviction that a foreigner will do as
he has promised is deeply rooted in the Chinese mind, and
flourishes in spite of whatever isolated exceptions to the rule
are forced upon observation. The confidence, too, that a for-
eigner will act justly (also in spite of some private and many
national examples to the contrary) is equally firm. But given
these two fixed points, the Chinese have a fulcrum from which
they may hope to move the most obstinate foreigner. " You
said thus and thus." " No, I did not say so." " But I imder-
stood you to say so. We all imderstood you to say so.
b2 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
Please excuse our stupidity, and please pay the money, as
you said you would." Such is the substance of thousands
of arguments between Chinese and foreigners, and in ninety-
seven cases out of a hundred the foreigner pays the money,
just as the Chinese knew he would, in order to seem strictly
truthful as well as strictly just. In the remaining three cases
some other means must be devised to accompUsh the result,
and of these three two will succeed.
Examples of the everyday misunderstanding on all subjects
will suggest themselves in shoals to the experienced reader,
for their name is legion. The coolie is told to pull up the
weeds in your yard, but to spare the precious tufts of grass
just beginning to sprout, and in which you see visions of a
longed-for turf. The careless buffalo takes a hoe and chops
Ip every green thing he meets, making a wilderness and call-
ing it peace. He did not " understand " you. The cook was
sent a long distance to the only available market, with instruc-
tions to buy a carp and a young fowl. He returns with no
fish, and three tough geese, which were what he thought you
ordered. He did not " understand " you. The messenger
that was sent just before the closing of the mail with an im-
portant packet of letters to the French Consulate returns with
the information that the letters could not be received. He
has taken them to the Belgian Consulate, and the mail has
closed. He did not " understand " you.
How easy it is for the poor foreigner both to misunderstand
and to be misunderstood is well illustrated in the experience
of a friend of the writer, who visited a Chinese bank with the
proprietors of which he was on good terms, and in the neigh-
boiurhood of which there had recently been a destructive con-
flagration. The foreigner congratulated the banker that the
fire had not come any nearer to his establishment. On this
the person addressed grew at once embarrassed and then
angry, exclaiming: "What sort of talk is this? This is not a
THE TALENT FOR MISUNDERSTANDING 63
proper kind of talk!" It was not till some time afterwards
that the discovery was made that the point of the offence
against good manners lay in the implied hint that if the fire
had come too near it might have burned the cash-shop, which
would have been most unlucky, and the very contemplation of
which, albeit in congratulatory language, was therefore taboo !
A foreigner who was spending a short time in the capital met
a drove of camels, among which was a baby camel. Turning
to the driver of the cart, who had been for many years in the
employ of foreigners, he said : " When you come back to the
house, tell my little boy to come out and look at this little
camel, as he has never seen one, and it will amuse him very
much." After a considerable lapse of time, during which, as
in the last case, the idea was undergoing slow fermentation,
the carter replied thoughtfully : " If you should buy the camel,
you could not raise it — it would be sure to die! "
The writer was once present at a service in Chinese, when
the speaker treated the subject of the cure of Naaman. He
pictured the scene as the great Syrian general arrived at the
door of Elisha's house, and represented the attendants striv-
ing to gain admittance for their master. Struggling to make
this as pictorial as possible, the speaker cried out dramatically,
on behalf of the Syrian servants, " Gatekeeper, open the door ;
the Syrian general has come!" To the speaker's surprise a
man in the rear seat disappeared at this point as if he had
been shot out, and it subsequently appeared that this person
had laboured under a misunderstanding. He was the gate-
keeper of the premises, and oblivious of what had gone before,
on hearing himself suddenly accosted he had rushed out with
commendable promptness to let in Naaman!
Not less erroneous were the impressions of another auditor
of a missionary in one of the central provinces, who wished to
produce a profound impression upon his audience by showing
with the stereopticon a highly magnified representation of a
64 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
very common parasite. As the gigantic body of this reptile,
much resembling an Egyptian crocodile, was thrown athwart
the canvas, one of the spectators present was heard to an-
nounce in an awed whisper the newly gained idea, " See, this
is the great Foreign Louse ! "
CHAPTER VIII.
THE TALENT FOR INDIRECTION.
ONE of the intellectual habits upon which we Anglo-
Saxons pride ourselves most is that of going directly to
the marrow of a subject, and when we have reached it saying
exactly what we mean. Considerable abatements must no
doubt be made in any claim set up for such a habit, when we
consider the usages of poUte society and those of diplomacy,
yet it still remains substantially true that the instinct of recti-
linearity is the governing one, albeit considerably modified by
special circumstances. No very long acquaintance is required
with any Asiatic race, however, to satisfy us that their instincts
and ours are by no means the same — in fact, that they are at
opposite poles. We shall lay no stress upon the redimdancy
of honorific terms in all Asiatic languages, some of which in
this respect are indefinitely more elaborate than the Chinese.
Neither do we emphasise the use of circumlocutions, peri-
phrases, and what may be termed ahases, to express ideas
which are perfectly simple, but which no one wishes to express
with simplicity. Thus a great variety of terms may be used
in Chinese to indicate that a person has died, and not one of
the expressions is guilty of the brutality of saying so ; nor does
the periphrasis depend for its use upon the question whether
the person to whom reference is made is an emperor or a
cooUe, however widely the terms employed may differ in the
two cases. Nor are we at present concerned, except in a very
general way, with the quality of veracity of language. When
6S
66 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
every one agrees to use words in " a Pickwickian sense," and
every one understands that every one else is doing so, the
questions resulting are not those of veracity but of method.
No extended experience of the Chinese is required to en-
able a foreigner to arrive at the conclusion that it is impossi-
ble, from merely hearing what a Chinese says, to tell what he
means. This continues to be true, no matter how proficient
one may have become in the colloquial — so that he perhaps
understands every phrase, and might possibly, if worst came
to worst, write down every character which he has heard in a
given sentence ; and yet he might be unable to decide exactly
what the speaker had in mind. The reason of this must of
course be that the speaker did not express what he had in
mind, but something else more or less cognate to it, from
which he wished his meaning or a part of it to be inferred.
Next to a competent knowledge of the Chinese language,
large powers of inference are essential to any one who is to
deal successfully with the Chinese, and whatever his powers in
this direction may be, in many instances he will still go astray,
because these powers were not equal to what was required of
them. In illustration of this all-pervading phenomenon of
Chinese life, let us take as an illustration a case often occur-
ring among those who are the earliest, and often by no means
the least important, representatives to us of the whole nation
— our servants. One morning the " Boy " puts in an appear-
ance with his usual expressionless visage, merely to mention
that one of his " aunts " is ailing, and that he shall be obliged
to forego the privilege of doing our work for a few days while
he is absent prosecuting his inquiries as to her condition. Now
it does not with certainty follow from such a request as this
that the " Boy " has no aunt, that she is not sick, and that he
has not some more or less remote idea of going to see about
her, but it is, to put it mildly, much more probable that the
" Boy " and the cook have had some misunderstanding, and
THE TALENT FOR INDIRECTION 6^
that as the prestige of the latter happened in this case to be
the greater of the two, his rival takes this oblique method of
intimating that he recognises the facts of the case, and retires
to give place to another.
The individual who has done you a favour, for which it
was impossible to arrange at the time a money payment, po-
litely but firmly decHnes the gratuity which you think it right
to send him in token of your obligation. What he says is that
it would violate all the Five Constant Virtues for him to accept
anything of you for such an insignificant service, and that you
wrong him by offering it, and would disgrace him by insisting
on his acceptance of it. What does this mean? It means
that his hopes of what you would give him were bhghted by
the smallness of the amount, and that, like Oliver Twist, he
" wants more." And yet it may not mean this after all, but
may be an intimation that you do now, or will at some future
time, have it in your power to give him something which will
be even more desirable, to the acquisition of which the present
payment would be a bar, so that he prefers to leave it an open
question till such time as his own best move is obvious.
If the Chinese are thus guarded when they speak of their
own interests, it follows from the universal dread of giving
offence that they will be more cautious about speaking of
others, when there is a possibihty of trouble arising in conse-
quence. Fond as they are of gossip and all kinds of small-
talk, the Chinese distinguish with a ready intuition cases in
which it will not do to be too communicative, and under these
circumstances, especially where foreigners are concerned, they
are the grave of whatever they happen to know. In multi-
tudes of instances the stoUd-looking people by whom we are
siuTounded could give us "points," the possession of which
would cause a considerable change in our conduct towards
others. But unless they clearly see in what way they are to
be benefited by the result, and protected against the risks, the
68 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
instinct of reticence will prevail, and our friends will maintain
an agnostic silence.
Nothing is more amusing than to watch the demeanour of
a Chinese who has made up his mind that it is best for him to
give an intimation of something unfavourable to some one
else. Things must have gone very far indeed when, even
under these conditions, the communication is made in plain
and unmistakable terms. What is far more likely to occur is
the indirect suggestion, by oblique and devious routes, of a
something which cannot, which must not be told. Our in-
formant glances uneasily about as though he feared a spy in
ambush. He lowers his voice to a mysterious whisper. He
holds up three fingers of one hand, to shadow dimly forth the
notion that the person about whom he is not speaking, but
gesturing, is the third in the family. He makes vague intro-
ductory remarks, leading up to a revelation of apparent im-
portance, and just as he gets to the chmax of the case he sud-
denly stops short, suppresses the predicate upon which every-
thing depends, nods significantly, as much as to say, "Now
you see it, do you not ? " when all the while the poor unen-
lightened foreigner has seen nothing, except that there is noth-
ing whatever to see. Nor will it be strange if, after working
things up to this pitch, your " informant " (falsely so called)
leaves you as much in the dark as he found you, intimating
that at some other time you will perceive that he is right!
It is a trait which the Chinese share with the rest of the
race, to wish to keep back bad news as long as possible, and
to communicate it in a disguised shape. But " good form "
among Chinese requires this deception to be carried to an ex-
tent which certainly seems to us at once surprising and futile.
We have known a fond grandmother, having come unexpect-
edly upon the whispered consultation of two friends, who had
arrived expressly to break to her the news of the sad death of
a grandchild away from home, to be assured with the empha-
THE TALENT FOR INDIRECTION 69
sis of iteration that they were only discussing a bit of gossip,
though within half an hour the whole truth came out. We
have known a son, returning to his home after an absence of
several months, advised by a friend in the last village at which
he called before reaching his home not to stay and see a the-
atrical exhibition, from which he inferred, and rightly, that his
mother was dead! We once had a Chinese letter entrusted
to us for transmission to a person at a great distance from
hom£, the contents of the missive being to the effect that
during his absence the man's wife had died suddenly, and that
the neighbours, finding that no one was at hand to prevent it,
had helped themselves to ever)' article in the house, which was
literally left unto him desolate. Yet on the exterior of this
epistle were inscribed in huge characters the not too accurate
words, " A peaceful family letter " !
The Chinese talent for indirection is often exhibited in re-
fraining from the use of numerals where they might reason-
ably be expected. Thus the five volumes of a book will be
labelled Benevolence, Justice, Propriety, Wisdom, Confidence,
because this is the invariable order in which the Five Constant
Virtues are named. The two score or more volumes of K'ang
Hsi's Dictionary are often distinguished, not, as we should
anticipate, by the radicals which indicate their contents, but
by the twelve " time-cycle characters." At examinations stu-
dents occupy cells designated by the thousand successive
characters of the millenary classic, which has no duplicates.
Another illustration of this subject is found in the oblique
terms in which references are made, both by members of her
family and others, to married women. Such a woman Uter-
ally has no name, but only two surnames, her husband's and
that of her mother's family. She is spoken of as " the mother
of so-and-so." Thus a Chinese with whom you are acquainted,
talks of the illness of " the Little Black One his mother."
Perhaps you never heard in any way that he had a " Little
70 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
Black One " in his household, but he takes it for granted that
you must know it. If, however, there are no children, then
the matter is more embarrassing. Perhaps the woman is
called the "Aunt" of a "Little Black One," or by some other
periphra.sis. Elderly married women have no hesitation in
speaking of their " Outside," meaning the one who has the
care of things out of the house ; but a young married woman
not blessed with children is sometimes put to hard straits in the
attempt to refer to her husband without intimating the con-
nection in words. Sometimes she calls him her " Teacher,"
and in one case of which we have heard she was driven to the
desperate expedient of dubbing her husband by the name of
his business—" Oilmill says thus and so! "
A celebrated Chinese general, on his way to the war, bowed
low to some frogs in a marsh which he passed, wishing his
soldiers to understand that valour like that of these reptiles is
admirable. To an average "Occidental it might appear that
this general demanded of his troop somewhat " large powers
of inference," but not greater, perhaps, than will be called for
by the foreigner whose lot is cast in China. About the time
of a Chinese New- Year when the annual debt-paying season
had arrived, an acquaintance, upon meeting the writer, made
certain gestures which seemed to have a deep significance.
He pointed his finger at the sky, then at the ground, then at
the person whom he was addressing, and last at himself, all
without speaking a word. There was certainly no excuse for
misapprehending this proposition, though we are ashamed to
say that we failed to take it in at its full value. He thought
that there would be no difficulty in one's inferring from his
pantomime that he wished to borrow a little money, and that he
wished to do it so secretly that only "Heaven," "Earth," "You,"
and " I " would know ! The phrase " eating [gluttony], drink-
ing [of wine], lust, and gambling " denotes the four most com-
mon vices, to which is now added opium smoking. A speaker
bL^«L&_5^
THE TALENT FOR INDIRECfidN t*
sometimes holds up the fingers of one hand and remarks,
" He absorbed them all," meaning that some one was guilty
in all these ways.
It is an example of the Chinese talent for indirection, that
owing to their complex ceremonial code one is able to show
great disrespect for another by methods which to us seem
preposterously oblique. The manner of folding a letter, for
example, may embody a studied affront. The omission to
raise a Chinese character above the line of other characters
may be a greater indignity than it would be in English to
spell the name of a person without capital letters. In social
intercourse rudeness may be offered without the utterance of
a word to which exception could be taken, as by not meeting
an entering guest at the proper point, or by neglecting to
escort him the distance suited to his condition. The omission
of any one of a multitude of simple acts may convey a thinly
disguised insult, instantly recognised as such by a Chinese,
though the poor untutored foreigner has been thus victimised
times without number, and never even knew that he had not
been treated with distinguished respect! All Chinese revile
one another when angry, but those whose Hterary talents are
adequate to the task dehght to convey an abusive meaning by
such delicate innuendo that the real meaning may for the time
quite escape observation, requiring to be digested like the
nauseous core of a sugar-coated pill. Thus, the phrase /ung-
hsi — literally " east-west " — means a thing, and to call a per-
son " a thing " is abusive. But the same idea is conveyed by
indirection, by saying that one is not "north-south," which
impHes that he is "east-west," that is, "a thing"!
Every one must have been struck by the wonderful fertility
of even the most illiterate Chinese in the impromptu inven-
tion of plausible excuses, each one of which is in warp and
woof fictitious. No one but a foreigner ever thinks of taking
them seriously, or as any other than suitable devices by which
72 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
to keep one's "face." And even the too critical foreigner
requires no common ability to pursue, now in air, now in
water, and now in the mud, those to whom most rigid econ-
omy of the truth has become a fixed habit. And when driven
to close quarters, the most ignorant Chinese has one firm and
sure defence which never fails, he can fall back on his igno-
rance in full assurance of escape. He " did not know," he
" did not understand," twin propositions, which, like charity,
cover a multitude of sins.
No more fruitful illustration of our theme could be found
than that exhibited in the daily issues of the Peking Gazette.
Nowhere is the habit of what, in classical language, is styled
" pointing at a deer and calling it a horse " carried to a higher
pitch, and conducted on a more generous scale. Nowhere is
it more true, even in China, that " things are not what they
seem," than in this marvellous lens, which, semi-opaque
though it be, lets in more light on the real nature of the Chi-
nese government than all other windows combined. If it is
a general truth that a Chinese would be more likely than not
to give some other than the real reason for anything, and that
nothing requires more skill than to guess what is meant by
what is said, this nowhere finds more perfect exempHfication
than in Chinese official life, where formality and artificiality
are at their maximum. When a whole column of the " lead-
ing journal " of China is taken up with a description of the
various aches and pains of some aged mandarin who hungers
and thirsts to retire from His Majesty's service, what does it
all mean? When his urgent prayer to be relieved is refused,
and he is told to go back to his post at once, what does that
mean? What do the long memorials reporting as to matters
of fact really connote? When a high official accused of some
flagrant crime is ascertained — as per memorial printed — to be
innocent, but guilty of something else three shades less blame-
worthy, does it mean that the writer of the memorial was not
THE TALENT FOR INDIRECTION 73
influenced to a sufficient extent, or has the official in question
really done those particular things ? Who can decide ?
Firmly are we persuaded that the individual who can peruse
a copy of the Peking Gazette and, while reading each docu-
ment, can form an approximately correct notion as to what is
really behind it, knows more of China than can be learned
from all the works on this Empire that ever were written.
But is there not reason to fear that by the time any outside
barbarian shall have reached such a pitch of comprehension
of China as this implies, we shall be as much at a loss to
know what he meant by what he said, as if he were really
Chinese?
CHAPTER IX.
FLEXIBLE INFLEXIBILITY.
THE first knowledge which we acquire of the Chinese is
derived from cur servants. Unconsciously to themselves,
and not always to our satisfaction, they are our earliest teach-
ers in the native character, and the lessons thus learned we
often find it hard to forget. But in proportion as our experi-
ence of the Chinese becomes broad, we discover that the con-
clusions to which we had been insensibly impelled by our
dealings with a very narrow circle of servants are strikingly
confirmed by our wider knowledge, for there is a sense in
which every Chinese may be said to be an epitome of the
whole race. The particular characteristic with which we have
now to deal, although not satisfactorily described by the para-
doxical title which seems to come nearest to an adequate
expression, can easily be made intelligible by a very slight
description.
Of all the servants employed in a foreign establishment in
China, there is no one who so entirely holds the peace of the
household in the hollow of his hands, as the cook. His aspect
is the personification of deference as he is told by his new
mistress what are the methods which she wishes him to em-
ploy, and what methods she most emphatically does not wish
employed. To all that is laid down as the rule of the estab-
lishment he assents with a cordiality which is prepossessing,
not to say winning. He is, for example, expressly warned
that the late cook had a disagreeable habit of putting the
74
FLEXIBLE INFLEXIBILITY 75
bread into the oven before it was suitably raised, and that as
this is one of the details on which a mistress feels bound to
insist, he and his mistress parted. To this the candidate re-
sponds cheerfully, showing that whatever his other faults may
be, obstinacy does not seem to be one of them. He is told
that dogs, loafers, and smoking will not be tolerated in the
kitchen ; to which he replies that he hates dogs, has never
learned to smoke, and being a comparative stranger, has but
few friends in the city, and none of them are loafers. After
these preliminaries his duties begin, and it is but a few days
before it is discovered that this cook is a species of " blood
brother " of the last one in the item of imperfectly risen bread,
that there is an unaccountable number of persons coming to
and departing from the kitchen, many of them accompanied
by dogs, and that a not very faint odour of stale tobacco is
one of the permanent assets of the establishment. The cook
cordially admits that the bread is not quite equal to his best,
but is sure that it is not due to imperfect kneading. He is
particular on that point. The strangers seen in the kitchen
are certain " yard brothers " of the coolie, but none of them
had dogs, and they are all gone now and will not return — •
though they are seen again next day. Not one of the servants
ever smokes, and the odour must have come over the wall
from the establishment of a man whose servants are dreadful
smokers. The cook is the personification of reasonableness,
but as there is nothing to change he does not know how to
change it.
The same state of things holds with the coolie who is set to
cut the grass with a foreign sickle, bright and sharp. He re-
ceives it with a smile of approval, and is seen later in the day
doing the work with a Chinese reaping-machine, which is a
bit of old iron about four inches in length, fitted to a short
handle. *' The old," he seems to say, " is better." The wash-
erman is provided with a foreign washing-machine, which
76 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
economises time, soap, labour, and, most of all, the clothing
to be washed. He is furnished with a patent wringer which
requires no strength, and does not damage the fabrics. The
washing-machine and the wringer are alike suffered to relapse
into " innocuous desuetude," and the washerman continues to
scrub and wrench the garments into holes and shreds as in
former days. Eternal vigilance iS the price at which innova-
tions of this nature are to be defended.
The gardener is told to repair a decayed wall by using some
adobe bricks which are already on hand, but he thinks it
better to use the branches of trees buried a foot deep in the
top of the wall, and accordingly does so, explaining, if he is
questioned, the superiority of his method. The messenger
who is employed to take an important mail to a place several
days' journey distant, receives his packages late in the evening,
that he may start the next morning by daylight. The next
afternoon he is seen in a neighbouring alley, and on being
sent for and asked what he means, he informs us that he was
obHged to take a day and wash his stockings! It is the same
experience with the carter whom you have hired by the day.
He is told to go a particular route, to which, hke all others in
the cases supposed, he assents, and takes you by an entirely
different one, because he has heard from some passing stranger
that the other was not so good. Cooks, coolies, gardeners,
carters — all agree in distrusting otir judgment, and in placing
supreme reliance upon their own.
Phenomena illustrating our subject are constantly observed
wherever there is a foreign dispensary and hospital. The
patient is examined carefully and prescribed for, receives his
medicine in a specified number of doses, with directions thrice
repeated to avoid mistakes, as to the manner in which and
times at which it is to be taken. Lest he should forget the
details, he returns once or twice to make stu"e, goes home and
swallows the doses for two days at a gulp, because the excel-
FLEXIBLE INFLEXIBILITY 77
lence of the cure must be in the direct ratio of the dose. The
most mwiute and emphatic cautions against disturbing a plas-
ter jacket are not sufficient to prevent its summary removal,
because the patient does not wish to become a " turtle," and
have a hard shell grow to his skin.
It is not a very comforting reflection, but it is one which
seems to be abundantly justified by observation, that the
opinion of the most ignorant eissistant in a dispensary seems
(and therefore is) to the average patient as valuable as that of
the physician in charge, though the former may not be able
to read a character, does not know the name of a drug or
the symptoms of any disease, and though the latter may have
been decorated with all the letters in the alphabet of medical
titles, and have had a generation of experience. Yet a hint
from the gatekeeper or the coolie may be sufficient to secure
the complete disregard of the directions of the physician, and
the adoption of something certainly foolish, and possibly fatal.
Thus far, we have spoken of instances of inflexibility in which
foreigners are concerned, for those are the ones to which our
attention is soonest drawn, and which possess for us the most
practical interest. But the more our observation is directed to
the relations of the Chinese to one another, through which if
anywhere their true dispositions are to be manifested, the
more we perceive that the state of things indicated by the ex-
pressive Chinese phrase " Outwardly is, inwardly is not," is
not exceptional. Chinese servants are yielding and complai-
sant to Chinese masters, as Chinese servants are to foreign
masters, but they have no idea of not doing things in their
own way, and it is not unhkely that their masters never for a
moment suppose that their orders will be literally obeyed. A
foreign employer requires his employes to do exactly as they
are told, and because they do not do so he is in a state of
chronic hostility to some of them. A friend of the writer
who had one of that numerous class of servants who combine
78 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
extreme faithfulness with extreme mulishness — thus making
themselves an indispensably necessary nuisance — happily ex-
pressed a dilemma into which the masters of such servants are
often brought, when he remarked that as regarded that partic-
ular "Boy," he was in a condition of chronic indecision,
whether to kill him or to raise his wages ! The Chinese master
knows perfectly well that his commands will be ignored in
various ways, but he anticipates this inevitable result as one
might set aside a reserve for bad debts, or allow a margin for
friction in mechanics.
The same greater or less disregard of orders appears to pre-
vail through all the various ranks of Chinese officials in their
relations to one another, up to the very topmost round. There
are several motives any one of which may lead to the contra-
vening of instructions, such as personal indolence, a wish to
oblige friends, or, most potent of all, the magnetic influence
of cash. A district magistrate who lived in a place where the
water is brackish, ordered his servant to take a water-cart and
draw water from a river several miles distant. The servant
did nothing of the kind, but merely went to a village where he
knew the water to be sweet, and provided the magistrate with
as much as he wanted of this fluid, to the saving of two thirds
the distance and to the entire satisfaction of all parties. If the
magistrate had known to a certainty that he was disobeyed, it
is not probable that he would have uttered a whisper on the
subject so long as the water was good. In China " the cat
that catches the rat is the good cat." Nothing succeeds like
success. The dread of giving offence and the innate Chinese
instinct of avoiding a disturbance would prevent misdemean-
ours of disobedience from being reported, though five hundred
people might be in the secret. That was a typical Chinese
servant who, having been told to empty the water from a
cistern into something which would save it for future use,
was found to have poured it all into a well! Thus he con-
, FLEXIBLE INFLEXIBILITY 79
trived to preserve the shell of conformity, with the most abso-
lute negation of any practical result. Dr. Rennie mentions
the case of an official at Amoy, who cut in two an Imperial
proclamation, posting the last part first, so that it could not
easily be read. Such devices are common in matters concern-
ing foreigners, whom mandarins seldom wish to please.
It is easy to see how such a poKcy of evasion may come
into colUsion with the demands of justice. The magistrate
sentences a criminal to wear a heavy wooden collar for a
period of two months, except at night, when it is to be re-
moved. By the judicious expenditure of cash " where it will
do the most good," this order is only so far carried out that
the criminal is decorated with the cangue at such times as the
magistrate is making his entrance to and his exit from the
yamen. At all other times the criminal is quite free from the
obnoxious burden. Does the magistrate not suspect that his
sentence will be defeated by bribery, and will he sUp out the
back way in order to come upon the explicit proof of disobe-
dience? By no means. The magistrate is himself a Chinese,
and he knew when the sentence was fixed that it would not
be regarded, and with this in mind he made the term twice as
long as it might otherwise have been. This seems to be a
sample of the intricacies of official intercourse in all depart-
ments, as exemplified by what forefgners continually observe.
The higher officer orders the lower to see that a certain step is
taken. The lower official reports respectfully that it has been
done. Meanwhile nothing has been done at all. In many
cases this is the end of the matter. But if there is a continued
pressure from some quarter, and the orders are urgent, the
lower magistrate transmits the pressure to those still lower,
and throws the blame upon them, until the momentum of the
pressure is exhausted, and then things go on just as they were
before. This is called " reform," and is often seen on a great
scale, as in the spasmodic suppression of the sale of opium, or
So CHINESE CHARACTERISTIC^
of th» cultivat'on of the poppy, with results which are known
to all.
There are doubtless those to whom the Chinese seem the
most " obstinate " of peoples, and to such the adjective " flex-
ible," which we have employed to characterise the " inflexi-
bility" of the Chinese, will appear singularly inappropriate.
Nevertheless, we must repeat the conviction that the Chinese
are far from being the most obstinate of peoples, and that they
are in fact far less obstinate than the Anglo-Saxons, We call
them " flexible " because, with a " firmness " like that of mules,
they unite a capacity of bending of which the Anglo-Saxon is
frequently destitute.
No better illustration of this talent of the Chinese for " flex-
ibility " can be cited, than their ability to receive gracefully
a reproof. Among the Anglo-Saxon race it is a lost art, or
rather it is an art that was never discovered. But the Chi-
nese listens patiently, attentively, even cordially, while you
are exposing to him his own shortcomings, assents cheerfully,
and adds, " I am in fault, I am in fault." Perhaps he even
thanks you for your kindness to his unworthy self, and prom-
ises that the particulars which you have specified shall be
immediately, thoroughly, permanently reformed. These fair
promises you well know to be " flowers in the mirror, and the
bright moon in the water," but despite their unsubstantial
nature, it is impossible not to be mollified therewith, and this,
be it noted, is the object for which they were designed.
Few comparisons of the sort hit the mark more exactly
than that which likens the Chinese to the bamboo. It is
graceful, it is everywhere useful, it is supple, and it is hollow.
When the east wind blows it bends to the west. When the
west wind blows it bends to the east. When no wind blows
it does not bend at all. The bamboo plant is a grass. It is
easy to tie knots in grasses. It is difficult, despite its supple-
ness, to tie knots in the bamboo plant. Nothing in nature is
'FLEXIBLE INFLEXIBILITY 8 1
more flexible than a human hair. It can be drawn out a large
percentage of its own length, and when the tractile force is
withdrawn, it at once contracts. It bends in any direction by
its own weight alone. There is a certain growth of hair on
many human heads which consists of definite tufts, quite per-
sistent in the direction of their growth, and generally incapa-
ble of any modification. Such a growth is vulgarly called a
" cow-lick," and as it cannot be controlled, the remaining
hairs, however numerous they may be, must be arranged with
reference thereto. If the planet on which we dwell be con-
sidered as a head, and the several nations as the hair, the
Chinese race is a venerable cow-lick, capable of being combed,
clipped, and possibly shaved, but which is certain to grow
again just as before, and the general direction of which is not
likely to be changed.
CHAPTER X.
INTELLECTUAL TURBIDITY.
IN speaking of " intellectual turbidity " as a Chinese charac-
teristic, we do not wish to be understood as affinning it to
be a peculiarity of the Chinese, or that all Chinese possess it.
Taken as a whole, the Chinese people seem abundantly able to
hold their own with any race now extant, and they certainly
exhibit no weakness of the intellectual powers, nor any tend-
ency to such a weakness. At the same time it must be borne
in mind that education in China is restricted to a very narrow
circle, and that those who are but imperfectly educated, or
who are not educated at all, enjoy in the structure of the Chi-
nese language what is called by the lawyers an "accessory
before the fact " to any most flagrant intellectual turbidity of
which they may be disposed to be guilty.
Chinese nouns, as is by this time known to several, appear
to be indeclinable. They are quite free from " gender " and
"case." Chinese adjectives have no degrees of comparison.
Chinese verbs are not hampered by any "voice," "mode,"
"tense," "number," or "person." There is no recognisable
distinction between nouns, adjectives, and verbs, for any char-
acter may be used indiscriminately in either capacity (or in-
capacity), and no questions asked. We are not about to com-
plain that the Chinese language cannot be made to convey
human thought, nor that there are wide ranges of human
thought which it is difficult or impossible to render intelligible
in the Chinese language (though this appears to be a truth),
82
INTELLECTUAL TURBIDITY 83
but only to insist that such a language, so constructed, invites
to "intellectual turbidity" as the incandescent heats of summer
gently woo to afternoon repose.
Nothing is more common in conversation with an unedu-
cated Chinese than to experience extreme difficulty in ascer-
taining what he is talking about. At times his remarks appear
to consist exclusively of predicates, which are woven together
in an intricate manner, the whole mass seeming, like Moham-
med's coffin, to hang in the air, attached to nothing whatever.
To the mind of the speaker, the omission of a nominative is a
point of no consequence. Ife knows what he is talking about,
and it never occurs to him that this somewhat important item
of information is not conveyed to the mind of his auditor by
any kind of intuition. It is remarkable what expert guessers
long practice has made most Chinese, in reading a meaning
into words which do not convey it, by the simple practice of
supplying subjects or predicates as they happen to be lacking.
It is often the most important word in the whole sentence
which is suppressed, the clue to which may be entirely un-
known. There is very frequently nothing in the form of the
sentences, the manner of the speaker, his tone of voice, nor
in any concomitant circumstance, to indicate that the subject
has changed, and yet one suddenly discovers that the speaker
is not now speaking of himself as he was a moment ago, but
of his grandfather, who lived in the days of Tao Kuang.
How the speaker got there, and also how he got back again,
often remains an insoluble mystery, but we see the feat accom-
plished every day. To a Chinese there is nothing more re-
markable in a sudden, invisible leap, without previous notice,
from one topic, one person, one century to another, than in
the ability of a man who is watching an insect on the window-
pane to observe at the same time and without in the least de-
flecting his eyes, a herd of cattle situated in the same line of
vision on a distant hill.
84 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
The fact that Chinese verbs have no tenses, and that thero
is nothing to mark transitions of time, or indeed of place, does
not tend to clarify one's perceptions of the inherently turbid.
Under such circumstances the best the poor foreigner can do,
who wishes to keep up the appearance at least of following in
the train of the vanished thought, is to begin a series of cate-
chetical inquiries, like a frontier hunter "blazing" his way
through a pathless forest with a hatchet. "Who was this
person that you are talking about now?" This being ascer-
tained, it is possible to proceed to inquire, " Where was this ? "
"When was it?" "What was it that this man did?" "What
was it that they did about it?" "What happened then?" At
each of these questions your Chinese friend gazes at you with
a bewildered and perhaps an appealing look, as if in doubt
whether you have not parted with all your five senses. But a
persistent piursuit of this silken thread of categorical inquiry
will make it the clue of Ariadne in delivering one from many
a hopeless labyrinth.
To the uneducated Chinese any idea whatever comes as a
surprise, for which it is by no means certain that he will not
be totally unprepared. He does not understand, because he
does not expect to understand, and it takes him an appreciable
time to get such intellectual forces as he has into a position
to be used at all. His mind is like a rusty old smooth-bore
cannon mounted on a decrepit carriage, which requires much
hauHng about before it can be pointed at anything, and then
it is sure to miss fire. Thus when a person is asked a simple
question, such as " How old are you? " he gazes vacantly at
the questioner, and asks in retiim, " I ? " To which you re-
spond, " Yes, you." To this he replies with a summoning up
of his mental energies for the shock, " How old ? " " Yes,
how old ? " Once more adjusting the focus, he inquires,
" How old am I ? " " Yes," you say, " how old are you ? "
INTELLECTUAL TURBIDITY 85
" Fifty-eight," he replies, with accuracy of aim, his piece being
now in working order.
A prominent example of intellectual turbidity is the preva-
lent habit of announcing as a reason for a fact, the fact itself.
" Why do you not put salt into bread-cakes ? " you ask of a
Chinese cook. " We do not put salt into bread-cakes," is the
explanation. " How is it that with so much and such beautiful
ice in your city none of it is stored up for winter ? " " No,
we do not store up ice for winter in our city." If the Latin
poet who observed, " Happy is he who is able to know the
reasons of things," had lived in China, he might have modified
his dictum so as to read, " Unhappy is the man who essays to
find out the reasons of things."
Another mark of intellectual torpor is the inability of an
ordinary mind to entertain an idea, and then pass it on to
another in its original shape. To tell A something which he
is to tell B, in order that C may govern his actions thereby, is
in China one of the most fatuous of undertakings. Either the
message will never be delivered at all, because the parties
concerned did not understand that it was of importance, or it
reaches C in such a shape that he cannot comprehend it, or
in a form totally at variance with its original. To suppose
that three cogs in so complicated a piece of machinery are
capable of playing into each other without such friction as to
stop the works, is to entertain a very wild hope. Even minds
of considerable intelligence find it hard to take in and then
give out an idea without addition or diminution, just as clear
water is certain to refract the image of a straight stick as if it
were a broken one.
Illustrations of these peculiarities will meet the observant
foreigner at every turn. "Why did he do so?" you inquire
in regard to some preposterous act. " Yes," is the compen-
dious reply. There is a certain niuneral word in constant use,
86 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
which is an aggravating accessory to vague replies. It sig-
nifies both interrogatively, "How many?" and affirmatively,
"Several." "How many days have you been here?" you
ask. " Yes, I have been here several days," is the reply. Of
all the ambiguous words in the Chinese language, probably
the most ambiguous is the personal (or impersonal) pronoun
^'a, which signifies promiscuously " he," "she," or " it." Some-
times the speaker designates the subject of his remarks by
vaguely waving his thumb in the direction of the subject's
home, or towards the point where he was last heard of. But
more frequently the single syllable i'a is considered wholly
sufficient as a relative, as a demonstrative pronoun, and as a
specifying adjective. Under these circumstances, the talk of
a Chinese will be like the testimony of a witness in an English
court, who described a fight in the following terms : " He'd a
stick, and he'd a stick, and he w'acked he, and he w'acked
he, and if he'd a w'acked he as hard as he w'acked he, he'd a
killed he, and not he he."
r"Why did you not come when you were called ? " you
vefntiu-e to inquire of a particularly negligent servant. " Not
on account of any reason," he answers, with what appears to
be frank precision. The same state of mental confusion leads
to a great variety of acts, often embarrassing, and to a well-
ordered Occidental intellect always irritating. The cook
makes it a matter of routine practice to use up the last of
whatever there may be in his charge, and then serves the next
meal minus some invariable concomitant. When asked what
he means by it, he answers ingenuously that f/iere was no more.
" Then why did you not ask for more in time? " " I did not
ask for any more," is his satisfactory explanation. The man
to whom you have paid a sum of cash in settlement of his
account, going to the trouble of unlocking your safe and
making change with scrupulous care, sits talking for " an old
half-day " on miscellaneous subjects, and then remarks with
INTELLECTUAL TURBIDITY 87
nonchalance, " I have still another account besides this one."
" But why did you not tell me when I had the safe open, so
that I could do it all at once ? " " Oh, I thought that account
and this one had nothing to do with each other!" In the
same way a patient in a dispensary who has taken a Uberal
allowance of the time of the physician, retires to the waiting-
room, and when the door is next opened advances to re-enter.
Upon being told that his case has been disposed of, he ob-
serves, with delightful simphcity, "But I have got another
different disease besides that one!"
An example of what seems to us immeasurable folly, is the
common Chinese habit of postponing the treatment of dis-
eases because the patient happens to be busy, or because the
remedy would cost something. It is often considered cheaper
to undergo severe and repeated attacks of intermittent fever,
than to pay ten cash — about one cent — for a dose of quinia,
morally certain to cure. We have seen countless cases of the
gravest diseases sometimes nourished to the point where they
became fatal simply to save time, when they might have been
cured gratuitously.
A man living about half a mile from a foreign hospital,
while away from home contracted som^e eye trouble, and
waited in agony for more than two weeks after his retiuTi
before coming for treatment, hoping each day that the pain
would stop, instead of which, one eye was totally destroyed
by a corneal ulcer.
Another patient, who had been under daily treatment for a
deeply ulcerated neck, mentioned on the eighteenth day that
his leg prevented his sleeping. Upon examination he was
found to have there another ulcer about the size and depth
of a teacup! When his neck was well he was intending to
speak about his leg!
Many such phenomena of Chinese hfe may serve to remind
one of a remark in one of the novels of Charles Reade, that
88 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
" Mankind are not lacking in intelligence, but they have one
intellectual defect — they are Muddleheads!"
A Chinese education by no means fits its possessors to
grasp a subject in a comprehensive and practical manner. It
is popularly supposed in Western lands that there are certain
preachers of whom it can be truthfully affirmed that if their
text had the smallpox, the sermon would not catch it. The
same phenomenon is found among the Chinese in forms of
peculiar flagrance. Chinese dogs do not as a rule take kindly
to the pursuit of wolves, and when a dog is seen running after
a wolf it is not unlikely that the dog and the wolf will be
moving, if not in opposite directions, at least at right angles
to each other. Not without resemblance to this oblique chase,
is the pursuit by a Chinese speaker of a perpetually retreating
subject. He scents it often, and now and then he seems to
be on the point of overtaking it, but he retires at length, much
wearied, without having come across it in any part of his
course.
China is the land of sharp contrasts, the very rich and the
wretchedly poor, the highly educated and the utterly ignorant,
living side by side. Those who are both very poor and very
ignorant, as is the fate of millions, have indeed so narrow a
horizon that intellectual turbidity is compulsory. Their ex-
istence is merely that of a frog in a well, to which even the
heavens appear only as a strip of darkness. Ten miles from
their native place many such persons have never been, and
they have no conception of any conditions of life other than
those by which they have always been surrounded. In many
of them even that instinctive curiosity common to all races
seems dormant or blighted. Many Chinese, who know that
a foreigner has come to live within a mile from their homes,
never thmk to inquire where he came from, who he is, or what
he wants. They know how to struggle for an existence, and
they know nothing else. They do not know whether they
INTELLECTUAL TURBIDITY 89
have three souls, as is currently supposed, or one, or none,
and so long as the matter has no relation to the price of grain,
they do not see that it is of any consequence whatever. They
believe in a future hfe in which the bad will be turned into
dogs and insects, and they also believe in annihilation pure
and simple, in which the body becomes dirt, and the soul — if
there be one — fades into the air. They are the ultimate out-
come of the forces which produce what is in Western lands
called a " practical man," whose hfe consists of two compart-
ments, a stomach and a cash-bag. Such a man is the true
positivist, for he cannot be made to comprehend anything
which he does not see or hear, and of causes as such he has
no conception whatever. Life is to him a mere series of facts,
mostly disagreeable facts, and as for anything beyond, he is
at once an atheist, a polytheist, and an agnostic. An occa-
sional prostration to he knows not what, or perhaps an offer-
ing of food to he knows not whom, suffices to satisfy the
instinct of dependence, but whether this instinct finds even
this expression will depend largely upon what is the custom
of those about him. In him the physical element of the Hfe
of man has alone been nourished, to the utter exclusion of the
psychical and the spiritual. The only method by which such
beings can be rescued from their torpor is by a transfusion of
a new life, which shall reveal to them the sublime truth uttered
by the ancient patriarch, " There is a spirit in man," for only
thus is it that " the inspiration of the Almighty giveth them
understanding."
CHAPTER XI.
THE ABSENCE OF NERVES.
IT is a very significant aspect of modern civilisation which
is expressed in the different uses of the word "nervous."
Its original meaning is "possessing nerve; sinewy; strong;
vigorous." One of its derivative meanings, and the one which
we by far most frequently meet, is, " Having the nerves weak
or diseased ; subject to, or suffering from, undue excitement
of the nerves ; easily excited ; weakly." The varied and com-
plex phraseology by which the pecuUar phases of nervous
diseases are expressed has become by this time familiar in our
ears as household words. There is no doubt that civilisation,
as exhibited in its modern form, tends to undue nervous ex-
citement, and that nervous diseases are relatively more com-
mon than they were a century ago.
But what we have now to say does not concern those who
are specially subject to nervous diseases, but to the general
mass of Occidentals, who, while not in any specific condition
of ill health, are yet continually reminded in a great variety of
ways that their nervous systems are a most conspicuous part
of their organisation. We allude, in short, to people who are
" nervous," and we understand this term to include all our
readers. To the Anglo-Saxon race, at least, it seems a matter
of course that those who live in an age of steam and of elec-
tricity must necessarily be in a different condition, as to their
nerves, from those who lived in the old slow days of sailing-
90
THE ABSENCE OF NERWES 91
packets and of mail-coaches. Ours is an age of extreme
activity. It is an age of rush. There is no leisure so much
as to eat, and the nerves are kept in a state of constant ten-
sion, with results which are sufficiently well known.
Business men in our time have an eager, restless air (at least
those who do their business in Occidental lands), as if they
were in momentary expectation of a telegram — as they often
are — the contents of which may affect their destiny in some
fateful way. We betray this unconscious state of mind in a
multitude of acts. We cannot sit still, but we must fidget.
We finger our pencils while we are talking, as if we ought at
this particular instant to be rapidly inditing something ere it
be forever too late. We rub our hands together as if prepar-
ing for some serious task, which is about to absorb all our
energies. We twirl our thumbs, we turn over heads with the
swift motion of the wild animal which seems to fear that
something dangerous may have been left unseen. We have
a sense that there is something which we ought to be doing
now, and into which we shall proceed at once to plunge as
soon as we shall have despatched six other affairs of even
more pressing importance. The effect of overworking our
nerves shows itself not mainly in such affections as " fiddler's
cramp," "telegrapher's cramp," "writer's cramp," and the
like, but in a general tension. We do not sleep as we once
did, either as regards length of time or soundness of rest.
We are wakened by slight causes, and often by those which
are exasperatingly trivial, such as the twitter of a bird on a
tree, a chance ray of Hght straggling into our darkened rooms,
the motion of a shutter in the breeze, the sound of a voice,
and when sleep is once interrupted it is banished. We have
taken our daily Hfe to rest with us, and the result is that we
have no real rest. In an age when it has become a kind of
aphorism that a bank never succeeds until it has a president
who takes it to bed with him, it is easy to understand that.
92 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
while the shareholders reap the advantage, it is bad for the
president.
We have mentioned thus fully these familiar facts of our
everyday Western life, to point the great contrast to them
which one cannot help seeing, and feeling too, when he begins
to become acquainted with the Chinese. It is not very com-
mon to dissect dead Chinese, though it has doubtless been
done, but we do not hear of any reason for supposing that the
nervous anatomy of the " dark-haired race " differs in any
essential respect from that of the Caucasian. But though the
nerves of a Chinese as compared with those of the Occidental
may be, as the geometricians say, " similar and similarly situ-
ated," nothing is plainer than that they are nerves or a very
different sort from those with which we are familiar.
It seems to make no particular difference to a Chinese h*" /
long he remains in one position. He will write all day Ike
an automaton. If he is a handicraftsman, he will stand in
one place from dewy morn till dusky eve, working away at
his weaving, his gold-beating, or whatever it may be, and do it
every day without any variation in the monotony, and appar-
ently with no special consciousness that there is any monotony
to be varied. In the same way Chinese school-children are
subjected to an amount of confinement, unrelieved by any
recesses or change of work, which would soon drive Western
pupils to the verge of insanity. The very infants in arms,
instead of squirming and wriggling as our children begin to do
almost as soon as they are bom, lie as impassive as so many
mud gods. And at a more advanced age, when Western
children would vie with the monkey in its wildest antics,
Chinese children will often stand, sit, or squat in the same
posture for a great length of time.
It seems to be a physiological fact that to the Chinese
exercise is superfluous. They cannot understand the desire
which seems to possess all plasses of foreigners abke, to walk
THE ABSENCE OF NERWES 93
when there is no desire to go anywhere ; much less can they
comprehend the impulse to race over the country at the risk
of one's life, in such a singular performance as that known as
a " paper hunt," representing " hare and hounds " ; or the mo-
tive which impels men of good social position to stand all the
afternoon in the sun, trying to knock a base-ball to some spot
where it shall be inaccessible to some other persons, or, on
the other hand, struggling to catch the same ball with celerity,
so as to "kill" another person on his "base"! A Cantonese
teacher asked a servant about a foreign lady whom he had
seen playing tennis : " How much is she paid for rushing
about like that ? " On being told " Nothing," he would not
believe it. Why any mortal should do acts bke this, when he
is abundantly able to hire coolies to do them for him, is, we
repeat, essentially incomprehensible to a Chinese, nor is it
any more comprehensible to him because he has heard it
explained.
In the item of sleep, the Chinese establishes the same differ-
ence between himself and the Occidental as in the directions
already specified. Generally speaking, he is able to sleep any-
where. None of the trifling disturbances which drive us to
despair annoy him. With a brick for a pillow, he can lie
down on his bed of stalks or mud bricks or rattan and sleep
the sleep of the just, with no reference to the rest of creation.
He does not want his room darkened, nor does he require
others to be still. The "infant crying in the night" may
continue to cry for all he cares, for it does not disturb him.
In some regions the entire population seem to fall asleep, as
by a common instinct (hke that of the hibernating bear), dur-
ing the first two hours of summer afternoons, and they do this
with regularity, no matter where they may be. At two hours
after noon the universe at such seasons is as still as at two
hours after midnight. In the case of most working-people,
at least, and also in that of many others, position in sleep is
94 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
of no sort of consequence. It would be easy to raise in China
an army of a million men — nay, of ten millions — tested by
competitive examination as to their capacity to go to sleep
across three wheelbarrows, with head downwards, like a spider,
their mouths wide open and a fly inside !
Beside this, we must take account of the fact that in China
breathing seems to be optional. There is nowhere any venti-
lation worth the name, except when a typhoon blows the roof
from a dwelUng, or when a famine compels the owner to pull
the house down to sell the timbers. We hear much of Chinese
overcrowding, but overcrowding is the normal condition of
the Chinese, and they do not appear to be inconvenienced by
it at all, or in so trifling a degree that it scarcely deserves
mention. If they had an outfit of Anglo-Saxon nerves, they
would be as wretched as we frequently suppose them to be.
The same freedom from the tyranny of nerves is exhibited
in the Chinese endurance of physical pain. Those who have
any acquaintance with the operations in hospitals in China,
know how common, or rather how almost universal, it is for
the patients to bear without flinching a degree of pain from
which the stoutest of us would shrink in terror. It would be
easy to expand this topic alone into an essay, but >ye must
pass it by, merely calling attention to a remark of George
EUot's, in one of her letters. " The highest calling and elec-
tion," she says — irritated, no doubt, by theological formulas
for which she had no taste — " is to do without opium, and to
bear pain with clear-eyed endurance." If she is right, there
can be little doubt that most Chinese, at least, have made
their calling and election sure.
It is a remark of Mrs. Browning's, that " Observation with-
out sympathy is tortiu-e." So it doubdess is to persons of a
sensitive organisation like the distinguished poetess, as well
as to a multitude of others of her race. An Occidental does
not like to be watched, especially if he is doing any delicate
THE ABSENCE OF NERVES 95
or difficult work. But perhaps a Chinese does his best work
under close observation. We all of us grow rapidly weary of
being stared at by the swarms of curious Chinese who crowd
about a foreigner, in every spot to which foreigners do not
commonly resort. We often declare that we shall " go wild "
if we cannot in some way disperse those who are subjecting
us to no other injury than that of unsympathetic obsers^ation.
But to the Chinese this instinctive feeUng of the Occidental is
utterly incomprehensible. He does not care how many people
see him, nor when, nor for how great a length of time, and
he cannot help suspecting that there must be something wrong
about persons who so vehemently resent mere inspection.
It is not alone when he sleeps that an Occidental reqviires
quiet, but most of all when he is sick. Then, if never before,
he demands freedom from the annoyance of needless noises.
Friends, nurses, physicians, all conspire to insure this most
necessar)' condition for recovery ; and if recovery is beyond
hope, then more than ever is the sufferer allowed to be in as
great peace as circumstances admit. Nothing in the habits
of the Chinese presents a greater contrast to those of Western-
ers, than the behaviour of the Chinese to one another in cases
of sickness. The notification of the event is a signal for all
varieties of raids upon the patient from every quarter, in num-
bers proportioned to the gravity of the disease. Quiet is not
for a moment to be thought of, and, strange to say, no one
appears to desire it. The bustle attendant upon the arrival
and departure of so many guests, the work of entertaining
them, the wailings of those who fear that a death is soon to
take place, and especially the pandemonium made by priests,
priestesses, and others to drive away the malignant spirits,
constitute an environment from which death would be to most
Europeans a happy escape. Occidentals cannot fail to sym-
pathise with the distinguished French lady who sent word to
a caller that she " begged to be excused, as she was engaged
96 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
in dying." In China such an excuse would never be offered,
nor, if it were offered, would it be accepted.
It remains to speak of the worries and anxieties to which
humanity is everywhere subjected in this distracted world.
The Chinese are not only as accessible to these evils as any
other people, but far more so. The conditions of their social
life are such that in any given region there is a large propor-
tion who are always on the ragged edge of ruin. A sHght
diminution of the rainfall means starvation to hundreds of
thousands. A slight increase in the rainfall means the devas-
tation of their homes by destructive floods, for which there is
no known remedy. No Chinese is safe from the entanglement
of a lawsuit, which, though he be perfectly innocent, may work
his ruin. Many of these disasters are not only seen, but their
stealthy and steady approach is perceived, like the gradual
shrinking of the iron shroud. To us nothing is more dreadful
than the momentary expectation of a calamity which cannot
be forefended, and which may bring all that is horrible in its
train. The Chinese face these things, perhaps because they
seem to be inevitable, with a " clear-eyed endurance," which
is one of the most remarkable phenomena of the race. Those
who have witnessed the perfectly quiet starvation of millions
in times of devastating famine will be able to understand what
is here meant. To be fully appreciated, it must be seen, but
seen on no matter what scale, it is as difficult for an Occi-
dental really to understand it as it is for a Chinese truly to
understand the idea of personal and social liberty, which the
Anglo-Saxon has inherited and developed.
In whatever aspect we regard them, the Chinese are and
must continue to be to us more or less a puzzle, but we shall
make no approach to comprehending them until we have it
settled firmly in our minds that, as compared with us, they are
gifted with the " absence of nerves." What the bearing of
this pregnant proposition may be on the future impact of this
THE ABSENCE OF NERVES 97
race with our own — an impact likely to become more violent
as the years go by — we shall not ventiire to conjecture. We
have come to believe, at least in general, in the survival of the
most fit. Which is the best adapted to survive in the strug-
gles of the twentieth century, the " nervous " European, or the
tireless, all-pervading, and phlegmatic Chinese?
CONTEMPT FOR FOREIGNERS.
IT is difficult for the European traveller who visits the city
of Canton for the first time, to realise the fact that this
Chinese emporium has enjoyed regular intercourse with Euro-
peans for a period of more than three hundred and sixty
years. During much the greater part of that time there was
very little in the conduct of any Western nation in its dealings
with the Chinese of which we have any reason to be proud.
The normal attitude of the Chinese towards the people of
other lands who chose to come to China for any purpose
whatever, has been the attitude of the ancient Greeks to every
nation not Grecian, considering and treating them as "bar-
barians." It is only since i860, by a special clause in the
treaties, that a character which signifies "barbarian," and
which the Chinese had been in the habit of employing in offi-
cial documents as synonymous with the word " foreign," was
disallowed.
It must always be remembered in connection with the be-
haviour of the Chinese towards outside nations of the West,
that the Chinese had for ages been surrounded only by the
most conspicuous inferiority, and had thus been flattered in
the most dangerous because the most plausible and therefore
the most effective, way. Finding, as they did, that the for-
eigners with whom they came into contact could be alternately
cajoled and bullied into conforming to the wishes of the Chi-
nese, the latter were but confirmed in their conviction of their
98
CONTEMPT FOR FOREIGNERS 99
own unspeakable superiority, and invariably acted upon this
theory, until compelled by the capture of Peking to do other-
wise. Since that time, although only a generation has passed
away, great changes have come over China, and it might be
supposed that now at length foreign civilisation and foreigners
would be appreciated by the Chinese at their full value. No
very extended or intimate acquaintance with the Chinese peo-
ple is needed, however, to convince any candid observer that
the present normal attitude of the Chinese mind, official and
unofficial, towards foreigners, is not one of respect. If the
Chinese do not feel for us an actual contempt, they do feel
condescension, and often unintentionally manifest it. It is
this phenomenon with which we have now to deal.
The first peculiarity which the Chinese notice in regard to
foreigners is their dress, and in this we think no one will claim
that we have much of which we can be proud. It is true that
all varieties of the Oriental costume seem to us to be clumsy,
pendulous, and restrictive of "personal liberty," but that is
because our requirements in the line of active motion are
utterly different from those of any Oriental people. When
we consider the Oriental modes of dress as adapted to Orien-
tals, we cannot help recognising the undoubted fact that for
Orientals this dress is exactly suited. But when Orientals,
and especially Chinese, examine our costume, they find noth-
ing whatever to admire, and much to excite criticism, not to
say ridicule. It is a postulate in Oriental dress that it shall
be loose, and shall be draped in such a way as to conceal the
contour of the body. A Chinese gentleman clad in a short
frock would not venture to show himself in pubhc, but num-
bers of foreigners are continually seen in every foreign settle-
ment in China, clad in what are appropriately styled " monkey
jackets." The foreign sack-coat, the double-breasted frock-
coat (not a single button of which may be in use), and espe-
cially the hideous and amorphous abortion called a " dress-
lOO CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
coat," are all equally incomprehensible to the Chinese, partic-
ularly as some of these garments do not pretend to cover the
chest, which is the most exposed part of the body, made still
more exposed by the unaccountable deficiencies of a vest cut
away so as to display a strip of linen. Every foreigner in
China is seen to have two buttons securely fastened to the tail
of his coat, where there is never anything to button, and where
they are as little ornamental as useful.
If the dress of the male foreigner appears to the average
Chinese to be essentially irrational and ridiculous, that of the
foreign ladies is far more so. It violates Chinese ideas of
propriety, not to say of decency, in a great variety of ways-
Taken in connection with that freedom of intercourse between
the sexes which is the accompaniment of Occidental civihsa-
tion, it is not strange that the Chinese, who judge only from
traditional standards of fitness, should thoroughly misunder-
stand and grossly misconstrue what they see.
Foreign ignorance of the Chinese language is a fertile occa-
sion for a feeling of superiority on the part of the Chinese.
It makes no difference that a foreigner may be able to con-
verse fluently in every language of modern Europe, if he can-
not understand what is said to him by an ignorant Chinese
coolie, the coolie will despise him in consequence. It is true
that in so doing the coolie will only still further illustrate his
own ignorance, but his feeling of superiority is not the less
real on account of its inadequate basis. If the foreigner is
struggling with his environment, and endeavouring to master
the language of the people, he will be constantly stung by the
air of disdain with which even his own servants will remark
in an audible " aside," " Oh, he does not understand/ " when
the sole obstacle to understanding lies in the turbid statement
of the Chinese himself. But the Chinese does not recognise
this fact, nor if he should do so would it diminish his sense of
innate superiority. This general state of things continues in-
CONTEMPT FOR FOREIGNERS loi
definitely for all students of Chinese, for no matter how much
one knows, there is always a continental area which he does
not know. It seems to be a general experience, though not
necessarily a universal one, that the foreigner in China, after
the preliminary stages of his experience are passed, gets little
credit for anything which he happens to know, but rather dis-
credit for the things which he does not know. The Chinese
estimate of the value of the knowledge which foreigners dis-
play of the Chinese language and Chinese literature is fre-
quently susceptible of illustration by a remark of Dr. John-,
son's in regard to woman's preaching, which he declared to!
be like a dog's walking on its hind legs — it is not well done,
but then it is a surprise to find it done at all!
Foreign ignorance of the customs of the Chinese is another
cause of a feeling of superiority on the part of the Chinese.
That any one should be ignorant of what they have always
known, seems to them to be almost incredible.
The fact that a foreigner frequently does not know wheiK
he has been snubbed by indirect Chinese methods, leads the \
Chinese to look upon their unconscious victim with conscious
contempt. Scornful indifference to what " the natives " may /
think of us, brings its own appropriate and sufficient punishment^
Many Chinese unconsciously adopt towards foreigners an
air of amused interest, combined with depreciation, like that
with which Mr. Littimer regarded David Copperfield, as if
mentally saying perpetually, "So young, sir, so young!"
This does not apply equally to all stages of one's experience
in China, for experience accumulates more or less rapidly for
shrewd observers, as foreigners in China are not unlikely to
be. Still, whatever the extent of one's experience, there are
multitudes of details, in regard to social matters, of which
one must necessarily be ignorant for the reason that he has
never heard of them, and there must be a first time for every
acquisition.
\^^t
1 02 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
Foreign inability to do '.vhat any ordinary Chinese can do
with the greatest ease, leads the Chinese to look down upon
us. We cannot eat what they eat, we cannot bear the sun,
I we cannot sleep in a crowd, in a noise, nor without air to
: breathe. We cannot scull one of their boats, nor can we cry
" Yi! yi!" to one of their mule-teams in such a way that the
animals will do anything which we desire. It is well known
that the artillery department of the British army, on the way
to Peking in i860, was rendered perfectly helpless near Ho-
I hsi-wu by the desertion of the. native carters, for not a man in
the British forces was able to persuade the Chinese animals to
take a single step !
Inability to conform to Chinese ideas and ideals in cere-
mony, as well as in what we consider more important matters,
causes the Chinese to feel a thinly disguised contempt for a
race whom they think will not and cannot be made to under-
stand " propriety." It is not that a foreigner cannot make a
bow, but he generally finds it hard to make a Chinese bow in
a Chinese way, and the difficulty is as much moral as physical.
^ , ;^ The foreigner feels a contempt for the code of ceremonials,
Y' ■ often frivolous in their appearance, and he has no patience,
if he has the capacity, to spend twenty minutes in a polite
scuffle, the termination of which is foreseen by both sides with
absolute certainty. The foreigner does not wish to spend his
<*' ^ time in talking empty nothings for " an old half-day." To
o i " him time is money, but it is very far from being so to a Chi-
nese, for in China every one has an abundance of time, and
v^' ' very few have any money. No Chinese has ever yet learned
^^ that when he kills time it is well to make certain that it is
time which belongs to him, and not that of some one else.
With this predisposition to dispense as much as possible
with superfluous ceremony because it is distasteful, and be-
cause the time which it involves can be used more agreeably
in other ways, it is not strange that the foreigner, even in his
c-
V
CONTEMPT FOR FOREIGNERS 103
own eyes, makes but a poor figure in comparison with a cere-
monious Chinese. Compare the dress, bearings, and action
of a Chinese official, his long, flowing robes and his graceful
motions, with the awkward genuflections of his foreign visitor.
It requires all the native politeness of the Chinese to prevent
them from laughing outright at the contrast. In this connec-
tion it must be noted that nothing contributes so effectively to
the instinctive Chinese contempt for the foreigner as the evi-
dent disregard which the latter feels for that official display so
dear to the Oriental. What must have been the inner thought
of the Chinese who were told that they were to behold the
" great American Emperor," and who saw General Grant in
citizen's costume with a cigar in his mouth, walking along the
open street? Imagine a foreign Consul, who ranks with a
Chinese Taotai, making a journey to a provincial capital to
interview the Governor, in order to settle an international dis-
pute. Thousands are gathered on the city wall to watch the
procession of the great foreign magnate, a procession which is
found to consist of two carts and riding horses, the attendants ^ . • ij
of the Consul being an interpreter, a Chinese acting as mes-l jLa.-^^'- V^**^
senger, and another as cook! Is it any wonder that Orien-l ' f L
tals, gazing on such a scene, should look with a curiosity - , ^*"'*^r
which changes first to indifference and then to contempt ?
The particulars in which we consider ourselves to be un-
questionably superior to the Chinese do not make upon them
the impression which we should expect, and which we could
desire. They recognise the fact that we are their superiors (^^jij^^
in mechanical contrivances, but many of these contrivances
are regarded in the light in which we should look upon feats
of sleight-of-hand — curious, inexplicable, and useless. Our
results appear to them to be due to some kind of supernatural "^
power, and it is remembered that Confucius refused to talk of i 'v>'*''\i
magic. How profoundly indifferent the Chinese are to the
wonders of steam and electricity practically applied, an army
104 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
of disappointed contractors who have been in China have
discovered. With few exceptions, the Chinese do not wish
( (though they may be forced to take) foreign models for any-
' thing whatever. They care nothing for sanitation, for ventila-
' tion, nor for physiology. They would like some, but by no
means all, of the results of Western progress without submit-
c>^ ting to Western methods, but rather than submit to Western
methods they will cheerfully forego the results. Whatever
has a direct, unmistakable tendency to make China formidable
as a " power," that they want and will have, but the rest must
wait ; and if there were not a Zeitgeist, or Spirit-of-the-Age,
superior to any Chinese, other improvements might wait long.
Some Chinese scholars and statesmen, apparently realising the
inferiority of China, claim that Western nations have merely
used the data accumulated by ancient Chinese who cultivated
mathematical and natural science to a high degree, but whose
modem descendants have unfortunately allowed the secrets of
nature to be stolen by the men of the West.
A f The Chinese do not appear to be much impressed by the
o--^ I undoubted ability of individual foreigners in practical lines.
J^ \ Saxons admire the man who " can," and, as Carlyle was so
fond of remarking, they make and call him "king." The
skill of the foreigner is to the Chinese amusing and perhaps
R^ q5 amazing, and they will by no means forget or omit to make
^j^/^ V' demands upon it the next time they chance to want anything
^ done ; but so far from regarding the foreigner in this respect
as a model for imitation, it is probable that the idea does not
even enter the skull of one Chinese in ten thousand. To them
\ ,, the ideal scholar continues to be the Hterary fossil who has
^ learned everything, forgotten nothing, taken several degrees,
has hard work to keep from starvation, and with claws on his
^ hands several inches in length, cannot do any one thing (ex-
' cept to teach school) by which he can keep soul and body
together, for " the Superior Man is not a Utensil."
S^'
CONTEMPT FOR FOREIGNERS 105
Western nations, taken as a whole, do not impress educated
Chinese with a sense of the superiority of such nations to
China. This feeUng was admirably exemplified in the reply
of His Excellency Kuo, former Chinese Minister to Great
Britain, when told, in answer to a question, that in Dr. Legge's
opinion the moral condition of England is higher than that of
China. After pausing to take in this judgment in all its bear- A>«rw«
ings. His Excellency replied, with deep feeling, " I am very/ cLn-^*-^ V cJ^j^
much surprised." Comparisons of this sort cannot be success-', ^
fully made in a superficial way, and least of all from a diplo- ' t
matic point of view. They involve a minute acquaintance
with the inner life of both nations, and an ability to appre-
ciate the operations of countless causes in the gradual multi-
plication of effects. Into any such comparison it is far from
being our purpose now to enter. It is now well recognised' iji^*^ »>«>'
that the Literati of China are the chief enemies of the for- ^^ ■ '
eigner, who, though he may have sundry mechanical mysteries
at his disposal, is held to be wholly incapable of appreciating (v'-'^y*^^^^^!*^'''^
China's moral greatness. This feeling of jealous contempt is '
embodied in the typical Chinese scholar, "with his head in
the Sung Dynasty and his feet in the present." It is men of
this class who prepared and put in circulation the flood of
bitter anti-foreign literature with which in recent years central
China has been inundated.
It was once thought that with Western inventions China, (y^j^Y''
could be taken by storm. Knives, forks, stockings, and pianos'
were shipped to China from England, under the impression,
that this Empire was about to be " Europeanised." If there
ever had been a time when the Chinese Empire was to be
taken by storm in this way, that time would have been long
ago, but there never was such a time. China is not a coun-
try, and the Chinese are not a people, to be taken by storm
with anything whatsoever. The only way to secure the solid
and permanent respect of the Chinese race for Western peo-
io6 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
pies as a whole is by convincing object lessons, showing that
Christian civilisation in the mass and in detail accomplishes
results which cannot be matched by the civilisation which
China already possesses. If this conviction cannot be pro-
duced, the Chinese will continue, and not without reason, to
feel and to display in all their relation to foreigners both con-
descension and contempt.
CHAPTER XIII.
THE ABSENCE OF PUBLIC SPIRIT.
THE Book of Odes, one of the most ancient of the Chinese
Classics, contains the following prayer, supposed to be
uttered by the husbandmen : " May it rain first on our public
fields, and afterwards extend to our private ones." Whatever
may have been true of the palmy days of the Chou Dynasty
and of those which preceded it, there can be no doubt that
very little praying is done in the present day, either by hus-
bandmen or any other private individuals, for rain which is
to be applied "first" on the "public fields." The Chinese
government, as we are often reminded, is patriarchal in its
nature, and demands filial obedience from its subjects. A
plantation negro who had heard the saying, " Every man for
himself, and God for us all," failed to reproduce the precise
shade of its thought in his own modified version, as follows,
"Everyman for himself, and God for himself!" This new
form of an old adage 'contains in a nutshell the substance of
the views of the average Chinese \\nth regard to the powers
that be. " I, for my part, am obliged to look out for myself,"
he seems to think, if indeed he bestows any thought whatever
on the government, and " the government is old enough and
strong enough to take care of itself without any help of mine."
The government, on the other hand, although patriarchal, is
much more occupied in looking after the Patriarch, than in
caring for the Patriarch's family. Generally speaking, it will
do very little to which it is not impelled by the danger, if it
107
Io8 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
does nothing at first, of having to do all the more at a later
date. The people recognise distinctly that the prospective
loss of taxes is the motive force in government efforts to mit-
igate disasters such as the continual outbreaks of irrepressible
rivers. What the people do for themselves in endeavouring
to prevent calamities of this sort, is due to the instinct of self-
preservation, for the people thus make sure that the work is
done, and also escape the numberless exactions which are
sure to be the invariable concomitants of government energy
locally applied.
No more typical example could be selected of the neglect
of public affairs by the government, and the absence of public
spirit among the people, than the condition of Chinese roads.
There are abundant evidences in various parts of the Empire
Ithat there once existed great imperial highways connecting
many of the most important cities, and that these highways
were paved with stone and bordered with trees. The ruins
of such roads are found not only in the neighbourhood of
Peking, but in such remote regions as Hunan and Szechuen.
Vast sums must have been expended on their construction,
and it would have been comparatively easy to keep them in
repair, but this has been uniformly neglected, so that the ruins
of such highways present serious impediments to travel, and
the tracks have been abandoned from sheer necessity. It
has been supposed that this decay of the great lines of traffic
took place during the long period of disturbances before the
close of the Ming Dynasty, and at the beginning of the pres-
ent Manchu hne ; but making all due allowance for political
convulsions, a period of two hundred and fifty years is surely
sufficiently long in which to restore the arteries of the Empire.
No such restoration has either taken place or been attempted,
and the consequence is the state of things with which we are
but too famiUar.
The attitude of the government is handsomely matched by
THE ABSENCE OF PUBLIC SPIRIT 1 09
chat of the people, who each and all are in the position of / " ,rlJy\r^^^^^^
one who has no care or responsibihty for what is done with )
the pubhc property so long as he personally is not the loser. '
In fact, the very conception that a road, or that anything, (^ f
belongs to " the public " is totally alien to the Chinese mind. "^^ I
The " streams and mountains " (that is, the Empire) are sup-
posed to be the property in fee simple of the Emperor for the
time, to have and to hold as long as he can. The roads are
his too, and if anything is to be done to them let him do it.
But the greater part of the roads do not belong to the Em-
peror in any other sense than that in which the farms of the J^
peasants belong to him, for these roads are merely narrow "1-^^^
strips of farms devoted to the use of those who wish to use ^q
them, not with the consent of the owner of the land, for that "*^'' v^
was never asked, but from the force of necessity. The entire
road belongs to some farm, and pays taxes hke any other
land, albeit the owner derives no more advantage from its
use than does any one else. Under these circumstances, it is
evidently the interest of the farmer to restrict the roads as
much as he can, which he does by an extended system of
ditches and banks designed to make it difficult for any one to
traverse any other than the narrow strip of land which is in-
dispensable for communication. If the heavy summer rains
wash away a part of the farm into the road, the farmer goes
to the road and digs his land out again, a process which, com-
bined with natural drainage and the incessant dust-storms, , /' ^
results eventually in making the road a canal. Of what we\ (iMr '*^ \
mean by " right of way " no Chinese has the smallest con- / ' '''
ception.
Travellers on the Peiho River between Tientsin and Peking
have sometimes noticed in the river little flags, and upon
inquiry have ascertained that they indicated the spots where
torpedoes had been planted, and that passing boats were ex-
pected to avoid them! A detachment of Chinese troops en-
^^'
110 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
gaged in artillery practice has been known to train their
cannon directly across one of the leading highways of the
Empire, to the great interruption of traffic and to the terror
of the animals attached to carts, the result being a serious
runaway accident.
A man who wishes to load or to unload his cart leaves it
in the middle of the roadway while the process is going on,
and whoever wishes to use the road must wait until the pro-
'cess is completed. If a farmer has occasion to fell a tree he
j allows it to fall across the road, and travellers can tarry until
I the trunk is chopped up and removed.
The free and easy ways of the country districts are well
matched by the encroachments upon the streets of cities.
The wide streets of Peking are lined with stalls and booths
which have no right of existence, and which must be sum-
marily removed if the Emperor happens to pass that way.
As soon as the Emperor has passed, the booths are in their
old places. The narrow passages which serve as streets in
most Chinese cities are choked with every form of industrial
obstruction. The butcher, the barber, the peripatetic cook
with his travelling-restaurant, the carpenter, the cooper, and
countless other workmen, plant themselves by the side of the
tiny passage which throbs with the life of a great metropolis,
and do all they can to form a strangulating clot. Even the
women bring out their quilts and spread them on the road,
.for they have no space so broad in their exiguous courts.
I There is very little which the Chinese do at all which is not
I at some time done on the street.
Nor are the obstructions to traffic of a movable nature only.
The carpenter leaves a pile of huge logs in front of his shop,
the dyer hangs up his long bolts of cloth, and the flour-dealer
his strings of vermicelli across the principal thoroughfare, for
the space opposite to the shop of each belongs not to an
imaginary " public," but to the owner of the shop. The idea
THE ABSENCE OF PUBLIC SPIRIT Hi
that this alleged ownership of the avenues of locomotion en-
tails any corresponding duties in the way of repair, is not one
which the Chinese mind, in its present stage of development,
is capable of taking in at all. No one individual, even if he
were disposed to repair a road (which would never happen),
has the time or the material wherewith to do it, and for many
persons to combine for this purpose would be totally out of
the question, for each would be in deep anxiety lest he should
do more of the work, and receive less of the benefit, than
some other person. It would be very easy for each local
magistrate to require the villages lying along the line of the
main highways, or within a reasonable distance thereof, to
keep them passable at almost all seasons, but it is doubtful
whether this idea ever entered the mind of any Chinese
official.
Not only do the Chinese feel no interest in that which
belongs to the " pubhc," but all such property, if unprotected
and available, is a mark for theft. Paving-stones are carried
off for private use, and square rods of the brick facing to city
walls gradually disappear. A wall enclosing a foreign ceme-
tery in one of the ports of China was carried away till not a
brick remained, as soon as it was discovered that the place
was in charge of no one in particular. It is not many years
since an extraordinary sensation was caused in the Imperial
palace in Peking by the discovery that extensive robberies had
been committed on the copper roofs of some of the buildings
within the forbidden city. It is a common observation among
the Chinese that, within the Eighteen Provinces, there is no
one so imposed upon and cheated as the Emperor.
The question is often raised whether the Chinese have any
patriotism, and it is not a question which can be answered in
a word. There is undoubtedly a strong national feeling, espe-
cially among the literary classes, and to this feeling much of
the hostiUty exhibited to foreigners and their inventions is to
112 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
be traced. Within recent years the province of Hunan has
been flooded with streams of anti-foreign hterature full of
maUgnant calumniations, and designed to cause riots which
shall drive the foreign devil out of the Celestial Empire.
From the Chinese point of view the impulse which leads to
these publications is as praiseworthy as we should consider
resistance to anarchists to be. The charges are partly due to
misapprehension, and in part also to that race hatred from
which Western nations are by no means free. Probably many
Chinese consider these attacks thoroughly patriotic. But that
any considerable body of Chinese are actuated by a desire to
serve their country, because it is their country, aside from the
prospect of emolument, is a proposition which will require
much more proof than has yet been offered to seciu-e its ac-
ceptance by any one who knows the Chinese. It need not
be remarked that a Chinese might be patriotic without taking
much interest in the fortunes of a Tartar Dynasty like the
present, but there is the best reason to think that, whatever
the dynasty might happen to be, the feeling of the mass of the
nation would be the same as it is now — a feeling of profound
indifference. The key-note to this view of public affairs was
sounded by Confucius himself, in a pregnant sentence found
in the " Analects " : " The Master said : He who is not in an
office has no concern with plans for the administration of its
duties." To our thought these significant words are partly the
result, and to a very great degree the cause, of the constitu-
tional unwillingness of the Chinese to interest themselves in
matters for which they are in no way responsible.
M. Hue gives an excellent example of this spirit. "In
185 1, at the period of the death of the Emperor Tao Kuang,
we were travelling on the road from Peking, and one day
when we had been taking tea at an inn, in company with
some Chinese citizens, we tried to get up a little political dis-
cussion. We spoke of the recent death of the Emperor, an
THE ABSENCE OF PUBLIC SPIRIT 113
Important event which of course must have interested every-
body. We expressed our anxiety on the subject of the suc-
cession to the Imperial throne, the heir to which was not yet
pubHcly declared. 'Who knows,' said we, 'which of the three
sons of tlie Emperor will have been appointed to succeed
him? If it should be the eldest, will he piu-sue the same sys-
tem of government? If the younger, he is still very young,
and it is said that there are contrary influences, two opposing
parties at court ; to which will he lean? ' We put forward,
in short, all kinds of hypotheses, in order to stimulate these
good citizens to make some observation. But they hardly
listened to us. We came back again and again to the charge,
in order to elicit some opinion or other on questions that really
appeared to us of great importance. But to all our piquant
suggestions they replied by shaking their heads, puffing out
whiffs of smoke, and taking great gulps of tea. This apathy
was really beginning to provoke us, when one of these worthy
Chinese, getting up from his seat, came and laid his two hands
on our shoulders in a manner quite paternal, and said, smiling
rather ironically : ' Listen to me, my friend ! Why should you
trouble your heart and fatigue your head by all these vain
surmises? The mandarins have to attend to affairs of state ;
they are paid for it. Let them earn their money, then. But
don't let us torment ourselves about what does not concern
us. We should be great fools to want to do political business
for nothing.' ' That is very conformable to reason,' cried the
rest of the company ; and thereupon they pointed out to us
that oiu: tea was getting cold and our pipes were out."
When it is remembered that in the attack on Peking, in
i860, the British army was furnished with mules bought of
the Chinese in the province of Shantung ; that Tientsin and
Tungchow made capitulations on their own account, agreeing
to provide the British and French with whatever was wanted
if these cities were not disturbed; that most indispensable
114 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
coolie work was done for the foreign allies by Chinese subjects
hired for the purpose in Hongkong; and that when these
same coolies were captured by tlie Chinese army they were
sent back to the British ranks with their cues cut off — it is not
difficult to perceive that patriotism and public spirit, if such
things exist at all in China, do not mean what these words
imply to Anglo-Saxons.
Upon the not infrequent occasions when it is necessary for
the people to rise and resist the oppressions and exactions of
their rulers, it is always indispensable that there should be a
few men of capacity to take the lead. Under them the move-
ment may gather such momentum that the government must
make some practical concessions. But whatever it does with
the mass of the "stupid people," the leaders are invariably
marked men, and nothing less than their heads will satisfy the
demands of justice. To be willing not merely to risk but
almost certainly to lose one's life in such a cause is the highest
possible example of public spirit.
At critical epochs in Chinese history, especially when there
is likely to be a change of dynasties, single-hearted and reso-
lute men have often thrown themselves into the breach, with
a chivalrous devotion to the cause which they espoused worthy
of the highest praise. Such men are not only true patriots,
but are irrefragable proofs that the Chinese are capable of
being stirred to the most heroic exertions in following public-
spirited leaders.
CHAPTER XIV.
CONSERVATISM.
IT is true of the Chinese, to a greater degree than of any
other nation in history, that their Golden Age is in the
past. The sages of antiquity themselves spoke with the deep-
est reverence of more ancient " ancients." Confucius declared
that he was not an originator, but a transmitter. It was his
mission to gather up what had once been known, but long
neglected or misunderstood. It was his painstaking fidelity
in accomplishing this task, as well as the high ability which he
brought to it, that gave the Master his extraordinary hold upon
the people of his race. It is his relation to the past, as much
as the quality of what he taught, that constitutes the claim of
Confucius to the front rank of holy men. It is the Confucian
theory of morals that a good ruler will make a good people.
The prince is the dish, the people are the water ; if the dish is
round, the water is round, if the dish is square, the water will
be square also. Upon this theory, it is not strange that all
the virtues are believed to have flourished in the days when
model rulers existed. The most ignorant coolie will upon
occasion remind us that in the days of " Yao and Shun " there
was no necessity for closing the doors at night, for there were
no thieves ; and that if an article was lost on the highway it
was the duty of the first comer to stand as a nominal guard
over it until the next one happened along, who took his turn
until the owner arrived, who always found his property per-
fectly intact. It is a common saying that the present is infe-
iiS
*f
li6 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
rior to the past in the items of benevolence and justice ; but
that in violations of conscience the past cannot compete with
the present.
This tendency to depreciate the present time is by no means
confined to China or to the Chinese, but is found with impar-
tiahty all over the earth ; yet in the Celestial Empire it seems
to have attained a sincerity of conviction not elsewhere
equalled. AH that is best in the ancient days is believed to
have survived in the literature to which the present day is the
heir, and it is for this reason that this literature is regarded
with such unmixed idolatry. The orthodox Chinese view of
the Chinese Classics appears to be much the same as the
O^ -^ ^\y , orthodox Christian view in regard to the Hebrew Scriptures;
' they are supposed to contain all that is highest and best of the
wisdom of the past, and to contain all that is equally adapted
'' to the present time and to the days of old. That anything is
needed to supplement the Chinese Classics is no more believed
by a good Confucianist, than it is believed by a good Chris-
tian that supplementary additions to the Bible are desirable or
to be expected. Both Christians and Confucianists agree in
the general proposition that when a thing is as good as it can
be, it is idle to try to make it any better.
Just as many good Christians make some Bible " text " a
pretext for something which the biblical writers never had in
mind, so Confucian scholars are upon occasion able to find in
" the old masters " not only authority for all the modern pro-
ceedings of the government, but the real roots of ancient
mathematics, and even of modern science.
The Hterature of antiquity is that which has moulded the
Chinese nation, and has brought about a system of government
which, whatever its other quaHties, has been proved to possess
that of persistence. Since self-preservation is the first law of
nations as of individuals, it is not singular that a form of rule
which an experience of unmatched duration has shown to be
CONSERVATISM 117
SO well adapted to its end should have come to be regarded
with a reverence akin to that felt for the Classics. It would
be a curious discovery if some learned student of Chinese
history should succeed in ascertaining and explaining the pro-
cesses by which the Chinese government came to be what it
is. If ever those processes should be discovered, we think it
certain that it will then be clearly seen why there have been
in China so few of those interior revolutions to which all other
peoples have been subject. There is a story of a man who
built a stone wall six feet wide and only four feet high, and
on being asked his reasons for so singular a proceeding, he
replied that it was his purpose that when the wall blew over,
it should be higher than it was before ! The Chinese govern-
ment is by no means incapable of being blown over, but it is
a cube, and when it capsizes, it simply falls upon some other
face, and to external appearance, as well as to interior sub-
stance, is the same that it has always been. Repeated expe-
rience of this process has taught the Chinese that this result is
as certain as that a cat will fall upon its feet, and the convic-
tion is accompanied by a most implicit faith in the divine wis-
dom of those who planned and built so wisely and so well.
To suggest improvements would be the rankest heresy. Hence
it has come about that the unquestioned superiority of the
ancients rests upon the firm basis of the recognised inferiority
of those who come after them.
With these considerations clearly in mind, it is not difficult
to perceive the rationale of what seems at first the blind ^^^^ -:
and obstinate adherence of the Chinese to the ways of the| v**^*'*''**'^ V^
past. To the Chinese, as to the ancient Romans, manners and y^^iT*"^
morals are interchangeable ideas, for they have the same root
and are in their essence identical. To the Chinese an inva-
sion of their customs is an invasion of the regions which are
most sacred. It is not necessary for this effect that the cus-
toms should be apprehended in their ultimate relations, or in-
li8 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
deed, strictly speaking, apprehended at all. They are resolutely
defended by an instinct sinailar to that which leads a she-bear
to protect her cubs. This is not a Chinese instinct merely, but
ft belongs to human nature. It has been profoundly remarked
b)(.v that millions of men are ready to die for a faith which they
W*^ do not comprehend, and by the tenets of which they do not
regulate their hves.
Chinese customs, like the Chinese language, have become
established in some way to us unknown. Customs, like human
speech, once established resist change. But the conditions
under which Chinese customs and language crystallised into
shape are in no two places exactly the same. Hence we have
those perplexing variations of usage indicated in the common
proverb that customs differ every ten miles. Hence, too, we
have the bewildering dialects. When once the custom or the
dialect has become fixed, it resembles plaster-of-Paris which
has set, and while it may be broken, it cannot be changed.
This, at least, is the theory, but, like other theories, it must be
made sufficiently elastic to suit the facts, which are that no
mere custom is necessarily immortal, and, given certain con-
ditions, a change can be effected.
No better illustration of this truth could be given than one
drawn from the experience of the present dynasty in intro-
ducing an entirely new style of tonsure among their Chinese
subjects. It was inevitable that such a conspicuous and tan-
gible mark of subjection should have been bitterly resisted,
even to the death, by great numbers of the Chinese. But the
Manchus showed how well they were fitted for the high task
which they had undertaken, by their persistent adherence to
the requirement, compliance with which was made at once a
sign and a test of loyalty. The result is what we see. The
Chinese people are now more proud of their cues than of any
other characteristic of their dress, and the rancorous hostility
to the edict of the Manchus survives only in the turbans of
u
V
the natives of the provinces of Canton and Fnkien, coverings
once adopted to hide the national disgrace.
The introduction of the Buddhist rehgion into China was
accomphshed only at the expense of a warfare of the most
determined character ; but once thoroughly rooted, it appears
as much hke a native as Taoism, and not less difficult to
supplant.
The genesis of Chinese customs being what it is, it is easy ■
to perceive that it is the underlying assmnption that whatever r
is is right. Thus a long-established usage is a tyranny. Of
the countless individuals who conform to the custom, not one
is at all concerned with the origin or the reason of the acts.
His business is to conform, and he conforms. The degree of
religious faith in different parts of the Empire doubtless differs
widely, but nothing can be more certain than that all the rites
of the " three religions " are performed by miUions who are as
destitute of anything which ought to be called faith, as they
are of an acquaintance with Egyptian hieroglyphics. To any
inquiry as to the reason for any particular act of religious
routine, nothing is more common than to receive two answers :
the first, that the whole business of communication with the
gods has been handed down from the ancients, and must
therefore be on the firmest possible basis ; the second, that
" everybody " does so, and therefore the person in question
must conform. In China the machinery moves the cogs, and
not the cogs the machinerj'. While this continues to be al-
ways and everywhere true, it is also true that the merest shell
of conformity is all that is demanded. ^
It is a custom in Mongolia for every one who can afford it
to use snuff, and to offer it to his friends. Every one is pro-
vided with a httle snuff-box, which he produces whenever he
encounters a friend. If the person with the snuff-box hap-
pens to be out of snuff, that does not prevent the passing of
the snuff-box, of which each guest takes a dehberate, though
rao CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
an imaginary pinch, and returns the box to its owner. To seem
to notice that the box is empty would not be " good form,"
but by compliance with the proper usages the " face " of the
host is saved, and all is according to well-settled precedent.
In many important particulars it is not otherwise with the
Chinese. The life may have long departed, but there remains
the coral reef, the avenues to which, in order to avoid ship-
wreck, must be diligently respected.
The fixed resolution to do certain acts in certain ways, and
in no other, is not peculiar to China. The coolies in India
habitually carried burdens upon their heads, and applied the
same principle to the removal of earth for railways. When
the contractors substituted wheelbarrows, the coolies merely
transferred the barrows to the tops of their skulls. The coolies
in Brazil carry burdens in the same way as those of India. A
foreign gentleman in the former country gave a servant a letter
to be posted, and was surprised to see him put the letter on
his head and weight it with a stone to keep it in place. The
exact similarity of mental processes reveals a similarity of
cause, and it is a cause very potent in Chinese affairs. It
leads to those multiplied instances of imitativeness with which
we are all so familiar, as when the cook breaks an egg and
throws it away each time that he makes a pudding, because
on the first occasion when he was shown how to make a pud-
ding an egg happened to be bad ; or when the tailor puts a
patch on a new garment because an old one given him as a
measure chanced to be thus decorated. Stories of this sort
are doubtless often meant as harmless exaggerations of a
Chinese characteristic, but they represent the reality with great
fidelity.
Every one acquainted with Chinese habits will be able to
adduce instances of a devotion to precedent which seems to
us unaccountable, and which really is so until we apprehend
the postulate which underlies the act. In a country which
CONSERVATISM 121
Stretches through some twenty-five degrees of latitude, but in
which winter furs are taken off and straw hats are put on
according to a fixed rule for the whole Empire, it would be
strange if precedent were not a kind of divinity. In regions
where the only heat in the houses during the cold winter
comes from the scanty fire under the " stove-bed," or k'ang,
it is not uncommon for travellers who have been caught in a
sudden " cold snap " to find that no arguments can induce the
landlord of the inn to heat the k'ang, because the season for
heating it has not arrived!
The reluctance of Chinese artificers to adopt new methods
is sufficiently well known to all, but perhaps few even of these
conservatives are more conservative than the head of the
company of workmen employed to bum bricks in a kiln which,
with all that appertained thereto, was the property of foreign-
ers and not of those who worked it. As there was occasion to
use a kind of square bricks larger than those which happened
to be in fashion in that region, the foreigner ordered larger
ones to be made. All that was necessary for this purpose
was simply the preparation of a wooden tray, the size of the
required brick, to be used as a mould. When the bricks were
wanted they were not forthcoming, and the foreman, to whom
the orders had been given, being called to account for his
neglect, refused to be a party to any such innovation, adducing
as his all-sufficient reason the affirmation that under the whole
heavens there is no such mould as this !
The bearing of the subject of conservatism upon the rela-
tion of foreigners to China and the Chinese is not likely to be
lost sight of for a moment by any one whose lot is cast in
China, and who has the smallest interest in the future welfare
of this mighty Empire, The last quarter of the nineteenth
century seems destined to be a critical period in Chinese his-
tory. A great deal of very new wine is offered to the Chinese,
who have no other provision for its reception than a varied
122 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
assortment of very old wine-skins. Thanks to the instinctive
conservatism of the Chinese nature, very little of the new wine
has thus far been accepted, and, for that little, new bottles are
in course of preparation.
The present attitude of China towards the lands of the
West is an attitude of procrastination. There is on the one
hand small desire for that which is new, and upon the other
no desire at all, or even willingness, to give up the old. As
we see ancient mud huts, that ought long ago to have reverted
to their native earth, shored up with clumsy mud pillars which
but postpone the inevitable fall, so we behold old customs, old
superstitions, and old faiths now outworn, propped up and
made to do the same duty as heretofore. "If the old does
not go, the new does not come," we are told, and not without
truth. The process of change from the one to the other may
long be resisted, and may then come about suddenly.
At a time when it was first proposed to introduce tele-
graphs, the Governor-General of a maritime province reported
to the Emperor that the hostility of the people to the innova-
tion was so great that the wires could not be put up. But
when war with France was imminent, and the construction of
the line was placed upon an entirely different basis, the pro-
vincial authorities promptly set up the telegraph posts, and
saw that they were respected.
Not many years ago the superstition oi feng-skui was be-
lieved by many to be an almost insuperable obstacle to the
introduction of railways in China. The very first short line,
constructed as an outlet for the K'ai-p'ing coal mines, passed
through a large Chinese cemetery, the graves being removed
to make way for it, as they would have been in England or in
France. A single inspection of that bisected graveyard was
sufficient to produce the conviction ihzXfeng-shui could never
stand before an engine, when the issue is narrowed down to
a trial of strength between " wind- water " and steam. The
CO}JSERyATlSM 123
experience gained in the subsequent extension of this initial
rine shows clearly that however financial considerations may
delay the introduction of railways, geomantic superstitions are
for this purpose quite inert.
The union of the conservative instinct with the capacity for
invasion of precedents is visible in important Chinese affairs.
In China no principle is better settled than that, when one of
his parents dies, an official must retire from office. Yet
against his repeated and " tearful " remonstrances, the most
powerful subject in the Empire was commanded by the
Throne to continue his attention to the intricate details of the
most important plexus of duties to be found in the Empire,
through all the years of what should have been mourning
retirement after the death of his mother. No principle would
seem to be more firmly established in China than that a father
is the superior of his son, who must always do him reverence.
Equally well established is the principle that the Emperor is
superior to all his subjects, who must always do him rever-
ence. When, therefore, as at the last change of rulers, it hap-
pens that from a collateral line is adopted a young Emperor
whose father is still living, it would appear to be inevitable
that the father must either commit suicide, or go into a per-
manent retirement. Such, it was supposed when Kuang Hsii
ascended the throne, would actually be the end of Prince
Ch'un. Yet during the illness of the latter, his son, the Em-
peror, made repeated calls upon his subordinate-superior, the
father ; and some modus vivendi was arrived at, since this same
father until his death held important offices under his son.
As already remarked, the conservative instinct leads the
Chinese to attach undue importance to precedent. But rightly
understood and cautiously used, this is a great safeguard for
foreigners in their dealings with so sensitive, so obstinate, and
so conservative a people. It is only necessary to imitate the
Chinese method, to take things for granted, to assume the
124 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
existence of rights which have not been expressly withheld, to
defend them warily when they are assailed, and by all means to
hold on. Thus, as in the case of the right of foreign residence
in Peking, the right of foreign residence in the interior, and in
many others, wise conservatism is the safest defence. The
threatening reef which seemed so insuperable a barrier to navi-
gation, once penetrated, offers upon the inner side a lagoon
of peace and tranquillity, safe from the storms and breakers
which vainly beat against it.
a
CHAPTER XV.
INDIFFERENCE TO COMFORT AND CONVENIENCE.
N what we have now to say, it must be premised at the
outset that all that is affirmed of Chinese indifference to
comfort and convenience respects not Oriental but Occidental
standards, the principal object being to show how totally
different those standards are.
Let us first direct oiu* attention for a moment to the Chinese
dress. In speaking of Chinese contempt for foreigners, we
have already had occasion to mention that Western modes of
apparel have very httle which is attractive to the Chinese;
we are now forced to admit that the converse is equally true.
To us it certainly appears singular that a great nation should
become reconciled to such an unnatmral custom as shaving
off the entire front part of the head, leaving that exposed
which nature evidently intended should be protected. But
since the Chinese were driven to adopt this custom at the
point of the sword, and since, as already remarked, it has be-
come a sign and a test of loyalty, it need be no fiurther noticed
in this connection than to call attention to the imdoubted fact
that the Chinese themselves do not recognise any discomfort
from the practice, and would probably be exceedingly unwill-
ing to revert to the Ming Dynasty tonsure.
The same considerations do not apply to the Chinese habit
of going bareheaded at almost all seasons of the year, and
especially in summer. The whole nation moves about in the
blistering heats of the summer months holding one arm aloft.
"5
126 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
with an open fan held at such an angle as to obstruct a por-
tion of the rays of the sun. Those who at any part of their
lives hold an umbrella in their hands to ward off heat, must
constitute but a small part of the population. While men do
often wear hats upon certain provocation, Chinese women, so
far as we have observed, have no other kind of head-dress
than that which, however great its failure viewed from the un-
sympathetic Western standpoint, is intended to be ornamental.
One of the very few requisites for comfort, according to Chi-
nese ideas, is a fan, — that is to say, in the season when it is
possible to use such an accessory to comfort. It is not un-
common in the summer to see coolies, almost or quite devoid
of clothing, struggling to track a heavy salt-junk up-stream,
vigorously fanning themselves meanwhile. Even beggars
frequently brandish broken fans.
It is one of the unaccountable phenomena of Chinese civil-
isation that this people, which is supposed to have been orig-
inally pastoral, and which certainly shows a high degree of
ingenuity in making use of the gifts of nature, has never learned
to weave wool in such a way as to employ it as clothing. The
only exceptions to this general statement of which we are
aware relate to the western parts of the Empire, where, to a
certain extent, woollen fabrics are manufactured. But it is
most extraordinary that the art of making such goods should
not have become general, in view of the great numbers of
sheep which are to be seen, especially in the mountainous
regions.
It is believed that in ancient times, before cotton was intro-
duced, garments were made of some other vegetable fibres,
such as rushes. However this may be, it is certain that the
nation as a whole is at present absolutely dependent upon
cotton. In those parts of the Empire where the winter cold
is severe, the people wear an amount of wadded clothing
almost sufficient to double the bulk of their bodies. A child
INDIFFERENCE TO COMFORT AND CONl^ENIENCE 127
clad in this costume, if he happens to fall down, is often as
utterly unable to rise as if he had been strapped into a cask.
Of the discomfort of such clumsy dress we never hear the
Chinese complain. The discomfort is in the want of it. It
is certain, however, that no Anglo-Saxon would willingly tolr
erate the disabilities of such an attire, if he could by any pos-
sibility be relieved of it.
/" In connection with the heavy clothing of winter must be
mentioned the total lack of any kind of underclothing. To
us it seems difficult to support existence without woollen un-
dergarments, frequently changed. The Chinese are conscious
of no such need. Their burdensome wadded clothes hang
around their bodies like so many bags, leaving yawning spaces
through which the cold penetrates to the flesh, but they do
not mind this circumstance, although ready to admit that it is
not ideal. An old man of sixty-six, who complained that his
circulation was torpid, was presented with a foreign undershirt,
but told to keep it on every day, to avoid taking cold. A day
or two later it was ascertained that he had taken it off, as he
was "roasted to death.!*
Chinese shoes are made of cloth, and are always porous,
absorbing moisture on the smallest provocation. Whenever
the weather is cold this keeps the feet more or less chilled all
the time. The Chinese have, indeed, a kind of oiled boots
which are designed to keep out the dampness, but, like many
other conveniences, on account of the expense, the use of them
is restricted to a very few. The same is true of umbrellas as
a protection against rain. They are luxuries, and are by no
means regarded as necessities. Chinese who are obliged to
be exposed to the weather do not as a rule think it important,
certainly not necessary, to change their clothes when they
have become thoroughly wet, and do not seem to find the in-
convenience of allowing their garments to dry upon them at
all a serious one. While the Chinese admire foreign gloves,
128 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
they have none of their own, and while clumsy mittens are not
unknown, even in the extreme north they are rarely seen.
One of the most annoying characteristics of Chinese cos-
tume, as seen from the foreign standpoint, is the absence of
pockets. The average Westerner requires a great number of
these to meet his needs. He demands breast-pockets in his
coats for his memorandum books, pockets behind for his hand-
kerchiefs, pockets in his vest for pencil, tooth-pick, etc., as
well as for his watch, and in other accessible positions for the
accommodation of his pocket-knife, his bunch of keys, and
his wallet. If the foreigner is also provided with a pocket-
comb, a folding foot-rule, a cork-screw, a boot-buttoner, a
pair of tweezers, a minute compass, a folding pair of scissors,
a pin-ball, a pocket mirror, and a fountain pen, it will not
mark him out as a singular exception to his race. Having
become accustomed to the constant use of these articles, he
cannot dispense with them. The Chinese, on the other hand,
has few or none of such things ; if he were presented with
them he would not know where to put them. If he has a
handkerchief it is thrust into his bosom, and so also is a child
which he may have to carry around. If he has a paper of
some importance, he carefully unties the strap which confines
his trousers to his ankle, inserts the paper, and goes on his
way. If he wears outside drawers, he simply tucks in the
paper without untying anything. In either case, if the band
loosens without his knowledge, the paper is lost — a constant
occurrence. Other depositaries of such articles are the folds
of the long sleeves when turned back, the crown of a turned-
up hat, or the space between the cap and the head. Many
Chinese make a practice of ensuring a convenient, although a
somewhat exiguous, supply of ready money, by always stick-
ing a cash in one ear. The main dependence for security
of articles carried, is the girdle, to which a small purse, the to-
bacco pouch and pipe, and similar objects, are attached. If
INDIFFERENCE TO COMFORT AND CONyENIENCE 129
the girdle should work loose, the articles are liable to be lost.
Keys, moustache-combs, and a few ancient cash are attached
to some prominent button of the jacket, and each removal of
this garment involves care-taking to prevent the loss of the
appendages.
If the daily dress of the ordinary Chinese seems to us objec-
tionable, his nocturnal costume is at least free from criticism
on the score of complexity, for he simply strips to the skin,
wraps himself in his quilt, and sleeps the sleep of the just.
Night-dress he or she has none. It is indeed recorded that
Confucius "required his sleeping-dress to be half as long
again as his body." It is supposed, however, that the refer-
ence in this passage is to a robe which the Master wore when
he was fasting, and not to an ordinary night-dress ; but it is
at all events certain that modem Chinese do not imitate him
in his night-robe, and do not fast if they can avoid it. Even
new-bom babes, whose skins are exceedingly sensitive to
the least changes of temperature, are carelessly laid under
the bedclothes, which are thrown back whenever the mother
wishes to exhibit the infant to spectators. The sudden chill
which this absurd practice occasions, is thought by competent
judges to be quite sufficient to account for the very large
number of Chinese infants who, before completing the first
month of their existence, die in convulsions. When children
have grown larger, instead of being provided with diapers,
they are in some regions clad in a pair of bifurcated bags
partly filled with sand or earth, the mere idea of which is
sufficient to fill the breast of tender-hearted Western mothers
with horror. Weighted with these strange equipments, the
poor child is at first rooted to one spot like the frog which
was " loaded " with buck-shot. In the particular districts
where this custom prevails, it is common to speak of a person
who exhibits small practical knowledge, as one who has not
yet been taken out of his " earth-trousers "!
ISO CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
Chinese indifference to what we mean by comfort is exhib-
ited as much in their houses as in their dress. In order to
establish this proposition, it is necessary to take account not of
the dweUings of the poor, who are forced to exist as they can,
but rather of the habitations of those whose circumstances
enable them to do as they please. The Chinese do not care
for the shade of trees about their houses, but much prefer
poles co\'ered with mats. Those who are unable to afford
such a luxury, however, and who might easily have a grateful
shade-tree in their courtyard, do not plant anything of this
sort, but content themselves with pomegranates or some other
merely ornamental shrubs. When, owing to the fierce heat,
the yard is intolerable, the occupants go and sit in the street,
and when that is insufferable they retire to their houses again.
Few houses have a north door opposite the main entrance
on the south side. Such an arrangement would produce a
draught, and somewhat diminish the miseries of the dog-days.
When asked why such a convenience is not more common,
the frequent reply is that " IVe do not have north doors! "
North of the thirty-seventh parallel of latitude, the common
sleeping-place of the Chinese is the k'ang, a raised " brick-
bed " composed of adobe bricks, and heated by the fire used
for cooking. If there happens to be no fire, the cold earth
appears to a foreigner the acme of discomfort. If the fire
happens to be too great, he wakes in the latter part of the
night, feeling that he is undergoing a process of roasting. In
any event, the degree of heat will not be continuous through-
out the night. The whole family is huddled together on this
terrace. The material of which it is composed becomes in-
fested with insects, and even if the adobe bricks are annually
removed there is no way to seciu-e immunity from these un-
welcome guests, which are fixed occupants of the walls of all
classes of dwellings.
Other universally prevalent animal infestations there are,
INDIFFERENCE TO COMFORT AND CONVENIENCE 131
with which most Chinese are very familiar, but there are few
who seem to regard parasites as a preventable evil, even if they
are recognised as an evil at all. The nets which are used to
keep winged torments at bay, are beyond the means of all but
a small proportion even of the city population, and, so far as
we know, are rarely heard of elsewhere. Sand-flies and mos-
quitoes are indeed felt to be a serious nuisance, and occasion-
ally faint efforts are made to expel them by burning aromatic
weeds, but such pests do not annoy the Chinese a thousandth
part as much as they annoy us.
One of the typical instances of different standards of com-
fort is in the conception of what a pillow ought to be. In
Western lands, a pillow is a bag of feathers adjusted to sup-
port the head. In China a pillow is a support for the neck,
either a small stool of bamboo, a block of wood, or more com-
monly a brick. No Occidental could use a Chinese pillow in
a Chinese way without torture, and it is not less certain that
no Chinese would tolerate under his head for ten minutes the
bags which we use for that purpose.
We have spoken of the singular fact that the Chinese do
not to any extent weave wool. It is still more unaccountable
that they take no apparent interest in the feathers which they
pluck in such vast quantities from the fowls which they con-
sume. It would be exceedingly easy to make up wadded
bedding by employing feathers, and the cost of the feathers
would be little or nothing, since they are allowed to blow
away as beneath the notice even of the strict economy of
the Chinese. Yet, aside from sale to foreigners, we do not
know of any use to which such feathers are at present put, ex-
cept that the larger ones are loosely tied to sticks to sen'c as
dusters, and in western China, feathers are sometimes thickly
sprinkled on growing wheat and beans, to prevent their being
eaten by animals turned out to forage for themselves.
To an Occidental the ideal bed is at ©nee elastic and firm.
J-
132 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
The best example of such is perhaps that made from what is
known as woven wire, which in recent years has come into
such general use. But when one of the finest hospitals in
China was furnished with these luxurious appHances, the kind-
hearted physician who had planned for them was disgusted to
find that, as soon as his back was turned, those patients who
were strong enough to do so crawled from their elastic beds
down upon the floor, where they felt at home!
Chinese houses are nearly always ill-lighted at night. The
native vegetable oils are exceedingly disagreeable to the smell,
and only afford sufficient illumination to make darkness visi-
ble. The great advantages of kerosene are indeed recognised,
but in spite of them it is still true that throughout enormous
areas the oil made from beans, cotton-seed, and peanuts con-
tinues to be used long after kerosene has been known, simply
from the force of conservative inertia, backed by profound in-
difference to the greater comfort of being able to see clearly,
as compared with being able to see scarcely at all.
Chinese furniture strikes a Westerner as being clumsy and
uncomfortable. Instead of the broad benches on which our
ancestors used to recline, the Chinese are generally content
with very narrow ones, and it will not be surprising if some of
the legs are loose, or are so placed as to tip off the unwary
person who seats himself when there is no one at the other
end. The Chinese are the only Asiatic nation using chairs,
but according to our ideas Chinese chairs are models of dis-
comfort. Some of them are made on a pattern which pre-
vailed in England in the days of Queen Elizabeth or Queen
Anne, tall, straight of back, and inordinately angular. The
more common ones are shaped so as to accommodate persons
who weigh about two hundred and fifty pounds, but the
strength of the chairs is by no means proportioned to the
magnitude, and they soon fall to pieces.
The greatest objections which Westerners have to Chinese
INDIFFERENCE TO COMFORT AND CONVENIENCE I33
dwellings are undoubtedly the dampness and the cold. The
radical error in the construction of buildings, is that which
economises in the foundation. The inevitable and permanent
result is dampness. Floors of earth or of imperfectly burned
brick are to most foreigners not only sources of great discom-
fort, but are extremely prejudicial to health. Not less annoy-
ing are the loose doors, resting on pivots. The double leaves
of these doors admit the cold air at each side at the top and
at the bottom. Even if the cracks are pasted up with stout
paper, a door is but an imperfect protection against the bitter
winter weather, because it is almost impossible to teach Chinese
to keep an outside door shut. The notice which a business
man posted on his oflSce door, " Everybody shuts the doors
but you," would be a gross falsehood in China, where nobody
shuts a door. The frames of doors, both to houses and to
yards, are often made so low that a person of average stature
must at each passage either bow his head or bump it.
Chinese paper windows will not keep out wind, rain, sun,
heat, or dust. Window-shutters are not vfvy common, and
when they exist are often unused.
Most Chinese houses have only one cooking-boiler, a large
concave iron bowl, with a capacity of several gallons. But
one kind of food is generally cooked at a time, and when a
meal is in preparation hot water is not to be had. The stalks
and grass which are the fuel must be incessantly pushed under
the low kettle by a person squatting or sprawling in front
of the small flue. Almost all cooking is done in this way.
Steam and often smoke fill the room to an extent adapted to
blind and strangle a foreigner, but the Chinese seem to be in-
different to these evils, although aware that serious diseases
of the eye are a common consequence.
A Chinese dwelling in winter always appears to a Westerner
a thesaurus of discomfort, on account of the absence of arti-
ficial heat. The vast majority of the people, even where the
^
134 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
winters are severe, have no other heat than that modicum
obtained from the fuel burned in cooking, and conveyed to
the Jk'ang. The Chinese so highly appreciate the comfort of
a Ji'ang- that the women sometimes speak of it as their " own
mother." But while it is indeed the point of minimum dis-
comfort in the establishment, to Occidentals who wish to feel
positive heat from some source diffusing itself in grateful cur-
rents all over the body, a Chinese k'ang on a cold night is a
very inadequate substitute for the "chimney-corner" or for
the stove. In regions where coal is accessible, it is indeed
employed as fuel, but as compared with the whole country
these districts are very limited, and the smoke always escapes
into the room, which becomes gradually filled with carbonic
acid gas. Charcoal is very sparingly used even by those who
are in good circumstances, and the danger from its incautious
use, like that from the use of coal, is very great. The houses
are so uncomfortable that even at home if the weather is cold
the inmates often wear all the clothes they can put on. When
abroad they have no more to add. " Are you cold ? " we ask
them. " Of course," is the constant reply. They have never
been artificially warmed, in an Occidental sense, during their
whole lives. In the winter their blood seems to be like water
in the rivers, congealed at the surface, and only moving with
a sluggish current underneath. Considering these characteris-
tics of Chinese dwellings, it is no wonder that a certain Taotai
who had been abroad remarked that in the United States
the prisoners in jail had quarters more comfortable than his
yam^n.
We have already had occasion to point out the Chinese in-
difference to crowding and noise. As soon as the weather
becomes cold the Chinese huddle together as a matter of
course, in order to keep warm. Even in the depth of the
dog-days, it is not uncommon to see boats loaded with such
numbers of passengers that there must be barely room to sit
Indifference to comfort y4ND convenience 135
or to lie. No Westerners would tolerate such crowding, yet
the Chinese do not appear to mind it. Occidentals like to
have their dwellings at a httle distance from those of the near-
est neighbours, for ventilation and for privacy. The Chinese
know nothing either of ventilation or of privacy, and they do
not seem to appreciate these conditions when they are realised.
Every little Chinese village is built on the plan of a city with-
out any plan. In other words, the dwellings are huddled to-
gether as if land were excessively valuable. The inevitable
effect is to raise the price of land, just as in a city, though for
quite different reasons. Hence narrow courts, cramped ac-
commodations, unhealthful overcrowding, even where there is
abundant space to be had close at hand and at a moderate
rate.
A Chinese guest at a Chinese inn enjoys the bustle which
is concomitant upon the arrival of a long train of carts, and
falls asleep as soon as he has bolted his evening meal. His
fellow-traveller from Western climes lies awake half the night
listening to the champing of three-score mules, varied by kicks
and squeals that last as long as he keeps his consciousness.
These sounds are alternated by the beating of a huge wooden
rattle, and by the yelping of a large force of dogs. It is not
uncommon to see as many as fifty donkeys in one inn-yard,
and the pandemonium which they occasion at night can be
but faintly imagined. The Chinese, as M. Hue has mentioned,
are not unaware that the braying of this animal can be stopped
by suspending a brick to its tail, but repeated inquiries fail to
elicit information of a single instance in which the thing has
been actually done. The explanation is simply that a Chinese
does not particularly care whether fifty donkeys bray singly,
simultaneously, or not at all. No Occidental would be likely
to remain neutral on such a question. That this feeUng is not
confined to any particular stratum of the Chinese social scale
might be inferred from the circumstance that the wife of the
136 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
leading statesman of China had at one time in the vice-regal
yamen about one hundred cats!
The Buddhist religion is responsible for the reluctance of
the Chinese to put an end to the wretched existence of the
pariah dogs with which all Chinese cities are infested, yet the
trait of character thus exhibited is not so much Chinese as
Oriental. Mr. J. Ross Browne, who was once Minister from
the United States to China, published an entertaining volume
of travels in the East, adorned with drawings of his own.
One of these represented what appeared to be a congress
of all varieties of lean and mangy dogs, which was offered as
" a general view of Constantinople." The same cut would do
good service as a sketch of many Chinese cities. The Chi-
nese do not appear to experience any serious discomfort from
the reckless and irrepressible barking of this vast army of
curs, nor do they take much account of the really great dan-
gers arising from mad dogs, which are not infrequently en-
countered. Under such circumstances, the remedy adopted
is often that of binding some of the hair of the dog into the
wound which it has caused, a curious analogy to the practice
which must have originated our proverb that " the hair of the
same dog will cure." The death of the dog does not seem to
be any part of the object in view.
Most of the instances already adduced relate to Chinese
indifference to comfort. It would not be difficult to cite as
many more which bear upon disregard of convenience, but a
few examples will be sufficient. The Chinese pride themselves
upon being a literary nation ; in fact, the hterary nation of the
world. Pens, paper, ink, and ink-slabs are called the " four
precious things," and their presence constitutes a "literary
apartment." It is remarkable that not one of these four in-
dispensable articles is carried about the person. They are
by no means sure to be at hand when wanted, and all four
of them are utterly useless without a fifth substance, to wit,
INDIFFERENCE TO COMFORT AND CONVENIENCE I37
water, which is required for rubbing up the ink. The pen
cannot be used without considerable previous manipulation to
soften its delicate hairs ; it is very liable to be injured by
inexpert handling, and lasts but a comparatively short time.
The Chinese have no substitute for the pen, such as lead-
pencils, nor if they had them would they be able to keep them
in repair, since they have no penknives, and no pockets in
which to carry them. We have previously endeavoured, in
speaking of the economy of the Chinese, to do justice to their
great skill in accomplishing excellent results with very inade-
quate means, but it is not the less true that such labour-saving
devices as are so constantly met in Western lands are im-
known in China. In a modem hotel in the Occident one
has but to push something or to pull something and he gets
whatever he wants — ^hot or cold water, lights, heat, service.
But the finest hostelry in the Eighteen Provinces, like all in-
ferior places of accommodation, obliges its guest, whenever
he is conscious of an unsupplied need, to go to the outer door
of his apartment and yell at the top of his voice, vainly hop-
ing to be heard for his much speaking.
Many articles constantly required by the Chinese are not
to be had on demand, but only when the dealer in the same
happens to make his irregular appearance. At all other times
one might as well find himself dropped in the interior of the
Soudan, so far as the supply of current wants is concerned.
In the city every one carries a lantern at night, yet in some
cities, at least, lanterns are to be had only when the peddler
brings them around, and those who want them buy at such
times, as we do of a milkman or a dealer in fresh yeast. That
percentage of the whole population which hves in Chinese
cities cannot be a large one, and in the country this limitation
of traflSc is the rule and not the exception. In some districts,
for example, it is customary to sell timber for house-building
in the second moon, and the same logs are often dragged
13^ CHINESE CHARACTEklSTlCS
about the country from one large fair to another, till they are
either sold, or taken back to their point of departure. But
should any inexperienced person be so rash as to wish to buy
timber in the fifth moon, he will soon ascertain why the wisest
of Orientals remarked that " there is a time to every purpose
under the heaven."
In speaking of economy we have mentioned that as most
Chinese tools are not to be had in a completed state, the cus-
tomer buys the parts and has them united to suit himself,
which does not comport with our conception of convenience.
The writer once instructed a servant to buy a hatchet for
splitting wood. There was none to be had, but he returned
instead with fourteen large (imported) horse-shoes, which a
blacksmith hammered into something resembling a miner's
pick, to which a carpenter affixed a handle, the total cost
being much greater than that of a good foreign axe!
Few inconveniences of the Celestial Empire make upon the
Western mind a more speedy and a more indelible impression
than the entire absence of " sanitation." Whenever there has
been an attempt made to accomplish something in the way
of drainage, as in Peking, the resultant evils are very much
greater than those which they were designed to cure. No
matter how long one has lived in China, he remains in a con-
dition of mental suspense, unable to decide that most interest-
ing question so often raised, Which is the filthiest city in the
Empire? A visitor from one of the northern provinces
boasted to a resident in Amoy that, in offensiveness to the
senses, no city in south China could equal those of the north.
With a view to decide this moot point, the city of Amoy was
extensively traversed, and found to be unexpectedly clean —
that is, for a Chinese city. Jealous for the pre-eminence of
his adopted home, the Amoy resident claimed that he was
taken at a disadvantage, as a heavy rain had recently done
much to wash the streets! The traveller thicks h^ has found
INDIFFERENCE TO COMFORT AND CONVENIENCE I39
the worst Chinese city when he has inspected Foochow ; he
is certain of it when he visits Ningpo, and doubly sure on
arriving in Tientsin. Yet, after all, it will not be strange if he
heartily recants when he reviews with candour and impartiality
the claims of Peking!
The three points upon which the Occidental mind is siu"e
to lay principal stress when contemplating the inconveniences
of Chinese civilisation, are the absence of postal facilities, the
state of the roads, and the condition of the currency. Private
companies do of course exist, by which letters and parcels
may be transmitted from certain places in China to certain
other places, but their functions are exceedingly limited, and
compared with the whole Empire, the areas which they accom-
modate are but trifling. Of Chinese roads we have already
spoken, when discussing the absence of public spirit. There
is a road many miles in length cut through a mountain in
Shantung, which is so narrow that carts cannot pass one an-
other. Guards are stationed at each end, and traffic is only
allowed in one direction in the forenoon, and in the other
during the afternoon! It is because the Chinese costume —
especially Chinese shoes — is what has been described, and
because Chinese roads are what we know them to be, that
whenever the weather is bad the Chinese confine themselves
to their dwellings. In Western lands we speak of an unintelli-
gent person as one who does not know enough to go in when
it rains, but in China one should rather say of such a person
that he does not know enough to stay in when it rains.
One of the most common characters in the Chinese lan-
guage, used to denote imperative necessity, is composed of two
parts, which signify " stopped by the rain." With the possible
exception of official service, the idea that any human being
has functions the discharge of which can be harmonised with
the rapid precipitation of moisture in the outer atmosphere, is
one that can only be introduced to most Chinese skulls by a
.r
I40 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
process of trepanning. Not even public business is necessarily
urgent, the proverb to the contrary notwithstanding. We
have heard of a Chinese fort of undoubted strength, in a most
important position, armed with the most elaborate muniments
of war, such as Krupp guns, and provided with foreign drilled
troops, where on occasion of a rain every one of the sentries
judiciously retired to the guard-houses, leaving not a single
man anywhere in sight. They were " stopped by the rain " !
The Tientsin massacre of 1870 might have been quadrupled
in atrocity, but for a timely rain which deterred the despera-
does already on their way to the Settlement. A portable
shower would be one of the most perfect defences which a
foreign traveller in the hostile parts of China could desire.
We are confident that a steady stream of cold water dehvered
from a two-inch nozzle would, within five minutes of solar
time, disperse the most violent mob ever seen by a foreigner
in China. Grape-shot would be far less effectual, for many
would stop to gather up the spent shot, while cold water is
something for which every Chinese from the Han Dynasty
downwards entertains the same aversion as does a cat. Ex-
ternally or internally administered, he regards it as equally
fatal.
The subject of Chinese currency demands not a brief para-
graph, but a comprehensive essay, or rather a volume. Its
chaotic eccentricities would drive any Occidental nation to
madness in a single generation, or more probably such gigantic
evils would speedily work their own cure. In speaking of the
disregard of accuracy we have mentioned a few of the more
prominent annoyances. A hundred cash are not a hundred,
and a thousand cash are not a thousand, but some other and
totally uncertain number, to be ascertained only by experience.
In wide regions of the Empire one cash counts for two ; that
is, it does so in numbers above twenty, so that when one hears
that he is to be paid five hundred cash he understands that he
INDIFFERENCE TO COMFORT AND CONVENIENCE 141
will receive two hundred and fifty pieces, less the local abate-
ment, which perpetually shifts in different places. There is
a constant intermixture of small or spurious cash, leading to
inevitable disputes between dealers in any commodity. At
irregular intervals the local magistrates become impressed with
the evil of this debasement of the currency, and issue stem
proclamations against it. This gives the swarm of underlings
in the magistrate's yamen an opportunity to levy squeezes on
all the cash-shops in the district, and to make the transaction
of all business more or less difficult. Prices at once rise to
meet the temporary necessity for pmre cash. As soon as the
paying ore in this vein is exhausted — and it is not worked to
any extent — the bad cash returns, but prices do not fall. Thus
the irrepressible law by which the worse currency drives out
the better, is never for an instant suspended. The condition
of the cash becomes worse and worse, until, as in some parts
of the province of Honan, every one goes to market with two
entirely distinct sets of cash, one of which is the ordinary mix-
ture of good with bad, and the other is composed exclusively
of counterfeit pieces. Certain articles are paid for with the
spxirious cash only. But in regard to other commodities, this
is matter of special bargain, and accordingly there is for these
articles a double market price.
Chinese cash is emphatically " filthy lucre." It cannot be
handled without contamination. The strings, of five hun-
dred or a thousand (nominal) pieces, are exceedingly liable to
break, which involves great trouble in recounting and re-tying.
There is no uniformity of weight in the current copper cash,
but all is both bulky and heavy. Cash to the value of a
Mexican dollar weigh not less than eight pounds avoirdupois.
A few hundred cash are all that any one can carry about in
the little bags which are suspended for this purpose from the
girdle. If it is desired to use a larger sum than a few strings,
the transportation becomes a serious matter. The losses on
^
142 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
transactions in ingots of silver are always great, and the per-
son who uses them is inevitably cheated both in buying and
in selling. If he employs the bills of cash-shops, the difficulty
is not greatly relieved, since those of one region are either
wholly uncurrent in another region not far away, or will be
taken only at a heavy discount, while the person who at last
takes them to be redeemed has in prospect a certain battle
with the harpies of the shop by which the bills were issued, as
to the quality of the cash which is to be paid for them. Under
these grave disabilities, the wonder is that the Chinese are
able to do any business at all ; and yet, as we daily perceive,
they are so accustomed to these annoyances that their burden
appears scarcely felt, and the only serious complaint on this
score comes from foreigners.
It is very common for the traveller through a Chinese village
to see a donkey lying at full length, and attached to a post by
a strong strap passed about his neck. But instead of adjusting
himself to the length of his strap, the beast frequently drags
himself to the utmost limit of his tether, and reclines with his
head at an angle of forty-five degrees, his neck stretched in
such a way as to threaten the dislocation of the cervical ver-
tebrae. We wonder why he does not break his neck, and still
more what pleasure there can be in the apparent attempt to
do so. No Occidental donkey would behave in such a way.
The reader who has followed us thus far through these in-
adequate illustrations of our topic will bear in mind that the
Chinese race, though apparently in a condition of semi-strangu-
lation, seems to itself comparatively comfortable, which is but
to say that the Chinese standard of comfort and convenience,
and the standard to which we are accustomed, are widely
variant, which is the proposition with which we began. The
Chinese has learned to accommodate himself to his environ-
ment. To such inconveniences as he encounters, he submits
with exemplary patience, well knowing them to be inevitable.
INDIFFERENCE TO COMFORT AND CONVENIENCE i43
It is not unusual to hear persons who have considerable
acquaintance with the Chinese and their ways, especially in
the aspects to which our attention has just been drawn, affirm
that the Chinese are not civilised. This very superficial and
erroneous judgment is due to an unphilosophical confounding
of civilisation and comfort. In considering the present condi-
tion of China, which is much what it was three centuries ago,
it is well to look upon the changes through which we ourselves
have passed, for thus only can we arrive at a just comparison.
We cannot think of the England of Milton, Shakespeare, and
Elizabeth as an uncivilised country, but nothing is more cer-
tain than that to the most of us it would now prove to be
intolerable.
It is superfluous to allude to the manifold and complex
causes which have brought about such astonishing changes in
the British Islands within the past three centuries. Yet more
wonderful is the radical revolution which within the last fifty
years has taken place in the standard of comfort and con-
venience. If we were compelled to return to the crude ways
of our great-grandfathers and grandfathers, it might be a ques-
tion whether life for us would be worth living. Times have
changed, and we have changed with them. In China, on the
contrary, times have not changed, and neither have the peo-
ple. The standard of comfort and convenience is the same
now as it has been for centuries. When new conditions arise,
these standards will inevitably alter. That they will ever be
the same as those to which we have become accustomed is,
however, to be neither expected nor desired.
PHYSICAL VITALITY.
THAT physical vitality which forms so important a back-
ground for other Chinese characteristics, deserves con-
sideration by itself. It may be regarded in four aspects : the
reproductive power of the Chinese race, its adaptation to dif-
ferent circumstances, its longevity, and its recuperative power.
The first impression which the traveller derives from the
phenomena of Chinese life is that of redundance. China
seems to be full of people. It seems to be so because it is so.
Japan, too, appears to have a large population, but it does
not take a very discriminating eye to perceive that the dense
population of Japan bears no proportion to the dense popula-
tion of China. In respect of relative and absolute density of
population, China, more nearly resembles India than any other
country. But the people and the languages of India are
many and various, while the people of China, with some
exceptions not materially affecting the issue, are one and the
same. This first, impression of a redundant population is
ever)nvhere confirmed, no matter in what portion of this broad
Empire we set our foot. Where the population is in reaUty
sparse, this is generally found to be due to causes which are
susceptible of easy explanation. The terrible inroads of the
great T'aip'ing rebellion, followed by the only less destructive
Mohammedan rebellion, and by the almost unparalleled famine
of 1877—78, extending over five provinces, reduced the total
population of China, perhaps by many scores of millions. The
144
PHYSICAL VITALITY I45
devastations due to war are not so soon repaired to the eye as
they would be in Western lands, owing to the great reluctance
of the Chinese to leave their ancestral homes and go into new
regions. Nevertheless, it is not difficult to perceive that the
forces of waste, no matter how devastating, are not so power-
ful as the forces of repair. With a few decades of peace and
good crops, almost any part of China would, we think, recu-
perate from the disasters which during this centiuy have come
in such battalions. The provision for this recuperation is
visible to every one, and forces itself upon his notice whether
he does or does not desire to contemplate it. In any part of
the Chinese Empire the most conspicuous objects in the towns
and villages are the troops of Chinese children, with which, as
Charles Lamb says in his deprecation of the pride of over-
proud mothers, " every blind alley swarms." It is one of the
standing marvels of Chinese society by what means such a
vast army of little ones is fed and clothed, and it must be
well borne in mind that many of them are not "fed and
clothed " to any extent ; in other words, that the most ex-
treme poverty does not apparently tend to diminish Chinese
population.
The only permanent and effective check upon the rapid
increase of the Chinese population appears to be the confirmed
use of opium, a foe to the Chinese race as deadly as war,
famine, or pestilence. It is by no means necessary, in order
to receive a high idea of the multiplying power of the Chinese,
to assume the existence in China of a population far vaster in
numbers than that of any other country. Even if we take the
lowest estimate of about two hundred and fifty milUons, the
point is abundantly estabhshed, for the question is not one of
the mere number of people, but of the rate of increase. In
the absence of trustworthy statistics, we must be content to
come at conclusions in a general and inexact way ; but fortu-
nately in this matter it is almost impossible to go wrong. The
>^
146 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
Chinese marry at a very early age, and the desire tor posterity
is the one ruling passion in which, next to the love of money,
the Chinese race is most agreed.
Contrast the apparent growth of the Chinese at any point,
with the condition of the population in France, where the rate
of increase is the lowest in all Europe, and where the latest
returns show an absolute decrease in the number of inhabi-
tants. Such facts have excited the gravest fears as to the
future of that great country. The Chinese, on the other hand,
show no more signs of race decay than the Anglo-Saxons.
The earliest recorded command given by God to mankind
was that in which they were instructed to " be fruitful and
multiply and i-eplenish the earth." That command, as a
learned professor once remarked, " has been obeyed, and it is
the only command of God that has been obeyed," and of no
country is this more true than of China.
The Chinese Empire, as we have already had occasion to
remark, extends through a great area in latitude and longi-
tude, and embraces within itself almost every variety of soil,
climate, and production. So far as appears, the Chinese
flourish equally in the subtropical region, the subarctic region,
or anywhere between. Whatever differences are observed
seem to be due to the character of the region itself and its
capacity to sustain the population, rather than to any inherent
difference in the capacity of the people to adapt themselves
to one region rather than to another. The emigrating por-
tions of the Chinese people come from a relatively minute
area in the provinces of Kuangtung and Fukien, but wherever
they go, to India, Burma, Siam, the East Indies, the Pacific
Islands, Australasia, Mexico, the United States, the West In-
dies, Central America, or South America, we never hear that
they fail to adapt themselves with wonderful and immediate
success to their environment, whatever it may chance to be.
What we do hear, however, is that their adaptation is so quick
PHYSICAL VITALITY H?
and so perfect, their industry and their economy so in excess
of those of the natives of these lands, their soHdarity and their
power of mutual cohesion so phenomenal, that it is necessary
for the security of the remainder of the human race that " the
Chinese must go! " Under these circumstances, it is certainly
most fortunate for the peace of mind of that portion of man-
kind which is not Chinese, that this people does not as a whole
take to emigration on a large scale. If the eastern part of
the Asiatic continent were now as full of irrepressible human
beings, longing to turn their energies towards the rest of the
planet, as was Central Asia in the middle ages, it is hard to
see what would become either of us, or of our doctrine that
the fittest only survive.
The utter absence of any kind of statistics renders it im-
possible to speak of the longevity of the Chinese people in
any other than the most general way. Probably all observers
would agree in the conclusion that there is no part of China
in which old people are not exceedingly numerous. The
aged are always treated with great respect, and old age is
held to be an exceedingly great honour, and is reckoned as
the foremost of the five varieties of felicity. The extreme
care which is taken to preserve accurate records of the date
of birth, down to the precise hour, tends to precision of state-
ment when there is any occasion for such precision, albeit the
ordinary method of counting, as has been mentioned, is so
loose and inaccurate. The testimony of graveyard tablets is
in favovir of a considerable degree of longevity among the
common people, but except in the vicinity of supplies of stone
these tablets are found over only a few graves, so that, what-
ever inferences might otherwise be drawn from them as wit-
nesses, the tablets are practically valueless.
It is not common to hear of Chinese who are more than a
hundred years of age, but short of that limit the numbers
of very aged who could anywhere be collected, if sufficient
^
148 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
inducement were offered, we must consider as very large.
Indeed, when the exceedingly imperfect nutrition of the poor,
who constitute so large a part of the population of China, is
taken into account, it becomes a wonder how such numbers
of people survive to so great an age. It is well known that
in all Western lands throughout the present century the aver-
age duration of Hfe has been constantly rising. This is due to
the increased attention paid to the laws of life, to improved
means of preventing disease, and to better means of treating
it. It must be remembered that in China, on the other hand,
the conditions of life do not seem to vary greatly from what
they were when Columbus discovered America. If social and
medical science could do for China what has been done for
England within the past fifty years, the number of very old
people in the former country would certainly be very greatly
increased.
The complete ignorance of the laws of hygiene which
characterises almost all Chinese, and their apparent contempt
for those laws even when apprehended, are well known to all
foreigners who live in China. To a foreign observer it is a
standing problem why the various diseases which this igno-
rance and defiance of natiu^al laws invite, do not exterminate
the Chinese altogether. While vast niunbers of people do die
every year in China of diseases which are entirely preventable,
the fact that the number of such persons is not indefinitely
greater argues on the part of the Chinese a marvellous capac-
ity to resist disease and to recover from it. The readiness of
Chinese to throw away their lives on very slight provocation
is a characteristic as marked as the tenacity of their hold upon
them.
In the total absence of those vital statistics to which we
have already so often regretfully referred, we are obliged to
depend upon the recorded observations of foreigners, which,
owing to the constantly increasing number of foreign dispen-
PHYSICAL VITALITY 149
varies and hospitals, are becoming year by year more numerous
and more valuable.
To analyse and tabulate the medical reports issued even
in a single year, with a view to illustrating the recuperative
power of the Chinese, would be a most useful task, and the
result would certainly present the object in a fresh and forci-
ble manner. We must, however, be content with the mere
statement of a few cases, by way of illustration, two of which
occurred within the knowledge of the writer, while the third
is taken from the published reports of a large hospital in
Tientsin. The whole force of instances of this sort depends
upon the undoubted fact that they are by no means iso-
lated and altogether exceptional cases, but are such as could
be matched by the observation of very many of our readers.
(Several years ago, while living in a house with a Chinese
family, the writer heard one afternoon the most dismal screams
under the window, where was placed a large beehive, made of
adobe bricks, and open at the bottom. A little boy fomteen
months of age was playing in the yard, and seeing this open-
ing into what looked like a convenient play-house, had inju-
diciously crawled in. The child's head was shaved perfectly
bare, and was very red. The bees, either resenting the un-
usual intrusion, or mistaking the bald pate for a huge peony,
promptly lit upon the head and began to sting. Before he
could be removed the child had received more than thirty
stings. The child cried but a few moments, and then, being
laid on the k'ang, went to sleep. No medicine of any sort
being at hand, nothing was applied to the skin. Diuing the
night the child was perfectly quiet, and the next day no trace
of the swelling remained. ^
In the year 1878 a carter in the employ of a foreign family
in Peking was taken with the prevalent typhus fever, of which
so many died. On the thirteenth day, when the disease
reached a crisis, the patient, who had been very ill indeed,
15© CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
became exceedingly violent, exhibiting the strength of several
men. Three persons were deputed to watch him, all of whom
were exhausted with their labours. During the night of this
day the patient was tied to the bed to prevent his escape.
While the watchers were all asleep he contrived to loosen the
cords with which he was bound, and escaped from the house
perfectly naked. He was missed at about 3 a.m., and the
whole premises were searched, including the wells, into which
it was feared he might have plunged. He was traced to the
wall of the compound, which was nine or ten feet in height,
and which he had scaled by climbing a tree. He leaped or
fell to the ground on the outer side of this wall, and at once
made his way to the moat just inside the great wall which
separates the Tartar city of Peking from the Chinese city.
Here he was found two hours later, his head wedged fast be-
tween the upright iron bars which prevent passage through
the culvert under the wall. As he had passionately demanded
to be taken to this place to cool his fever, it was evident that
he had been in this situation for a great length of time. On
being taken home, his fever was found to be thoroughly
broken, and though troubled with rheumatism in the legs, he
made a slow but sure recovery.
A Tientsin man, about thirty years of age, had been in the
habit of making a living by collecting spent shells around the
ground where Chinese troops were engaged in artillery prac-
tice. On one occasion he secured a shell, when, on attempt-
ing to break it open, it exploded and blew off his left leg.
He was admitted to the hospital, and an amputation was per-
formed below the knee. Instead of being cured of this dan-
gerous mode of getting a precarious living, the man returned
to it again as soon as possible, and about six months later,
under similar circumstances, another explosion took place,
which blew off his left hand about two inches above the wrist,
leaving a ragged wound. The upper portion of the right arm
PHYSICAL yiTALlTY 151
was severely singed by powder. Deep lacerations took place
over the bridge of the nose and on the upper lip ; punctured
wounds, the result of exploding pieces of shell, were made on
the right cheek, on the right upper eyelid, on the posterior
edge of the frontal bone, and on the right wrist. There was
also a deep cut over the right tibia, exposing the bone. On
receiving these severe injuries the man lay in a semi-uncon-
scious and helpless condition for four hours, exposed to the
heat of the sun. A mandarin happening to see him, ordered
some coolies to carry him to the hospital, himself accompany-
ing them for two miles. The bearers apparently became tired
of their burden, and as soon as the mandarin was gone, threw
the poor wretch into a ditch to die. Though much exhausted
by the haemorrhage, he managed to crawl out and hop for five
hundred yards to a grain-shop, where he found a large basket
of meal, which he overturned with his sound arm and coiled
himself inside. To get rid of him the owners of the shop
carried him in the basket to the hospital gates, where he was
left outside to die. Although in a condition of extreme col-
lapse, and with a feeble pulse, due to the loss of so much
blood, the patient had no mental impairment and was able to
converse intelligibly. He had been addicted to opium smok-
ing, a circumstance which could not have been favourable to
recovery. Yet with the exception of diarrhoea on the fifth
and sixth days, and slight attacks of malaria, the patient had
throughout no bad symptoms, and left the hospital with a
wooden leg four weeks after his admission.
If a people with such physical endowments as the Chinese
were to be preserved from the effects of war, famines, pesti-
lence, and opium, and if they were to pay some attention to
the laws of physiology and of hygiene, and to be uniformly
nourished with suitable food, there is reason to think that they
alone would be adequate to occupy the principal part of the
planet and more.
CHAPTER XVII.
PATIENCE AND PERSEVERANCE.
THE term "patience" embraces three quite different mean-
ings. It is the act or quality of expecting long, without
complaint, anger, or discontent. It is the power or the act of
suffering or bearing quietly or with equanimity any evil — calm
endurance. It is also employed as a synonym of persever-
ance. That the group of qualities to which reference is here
made has a very important bearing on the life of the people
to whom they belong, is obvious at a glance. The disadvan-
tage arising from a separate and a distinct examination of
individual Chinese characteristics is nowhere more obvious
than in the consideration of the qualities of patience and per-
severance. These characteristics of the Chinese are insep-
arably connected with their comparative " absence of nerves,"
with their " disregard of time," and especially with that quality
of "industry" by which the national patience and persever-
ance are most conspicuously and most effectively illustrated.
What has been already said upon these topics will have served
to suggest one of the chief virtues in the Chinese character,
but the necessarily desultory treatment involved in such inci-
dental mention deserves to be supplemented by a more com-
prehensive presentation.
Among a dense population hke that of the Chinese Empire,
life is often reduced to its very lowest terms, and those terms
are literally a "struggle for existence." In order to live, it is
necessary to have the means of living, and those means each
152
PATIENCE AND PERSEyERANCE i53
must obtain for himself as best he can. The Chinese have
been well said to "reduce poverty to a science." Deep pov-
erty and a hard struggle for the means of existence will of
themselves never make any human being industrious ; but if a
man or a race is endowed with the instinct of industry, these
are the conditions which will tend most effectually to develop
industry. The same conditions will also tend to the devel-
opment of economy, which, as we have seen, is a prominent
Chinese quaUty. These conditions also develop patience and
perseverance. The hunter and the fisherman, who know that
their Hvelihood depends upon the stealth and wariness of their
movements, and the patience with which they wait for their
opportunity, will be stealthy, wary, and patient, no matter
whether they happen to belong to the races of mankind classed
as "civilised," to those called "semi-civilised," or to those
known as " savage." The Chinese have for ages been hunt-
ing for a living under conditions frequently the most adverse,
and they have thus learned to combine the active industry
of the most civilised peoples with the passive patience of the
North American Indian.
The Chinese are willing to labour a very long time for very
small rewards, because small rewards are much better than
none. Ages of experience have taught them that it is very
difficult to make industry a stepping-stone to those wider op-
portunities which we of the West have come to look upon as
its natural results. They are " natural " results only in the
sense that when appropriate conditions are found these results
will follow. A population of five hundred to the square mile^
it is scarcely necessary to observe, is not one of the conditions
adapted to lead to practical verification of the adage that in-
dustry and economy are the two hands of fortune. Bdt the
Chinese is content to toil on for such rewards as he may be
able to get, and in this contentment he illustrates his virtue
of patience.
154 CHINESE CHARy4CTERISTICS
It is related of the late General Grant, that on his return
from his trip around the globe, he was asked what was the
most remarkable thing that he saw. He replied at once that
the most extraordinary sight which he anywhere beheld was
the spectacle of a petty Chinese dealer by his keen competi-
tion driving out a Jew. There was great significance in the
observation. The qualities of Jewish people are by this time
well known, and have led to most surprising results, but the
Jews are after all but a small part of the human race. The
Chinese, on the other hand, are a considerable percentage of
the whole population of the planet. The Jew who was driven
out by the Chinese did not presumptively differ in any essen-
tial respect from any other Jew. The result of the competi-
tion would probably have been the same though the competi-
tors had been different in their identity, for it is morally certain
that the successful Chinese did not differ in any essential par-
ticular from millions of other Chinese who might have chanced
to be in his situation.
It is in his staying qualitta that the Chinese excels the
world. Of that quiet persistence which impels a Chinese
student to keep on year after year attending the examinations,
until he either takes his degree at the age of ninety or dies in
the effort, mention has been already made. No rewards that
are likely to ensue, nor any that are possible, will of themselves
account for this extraordinary perseverance. It is a part of
that innate endowment with which the Chinese are equipped,
and is analogous to the fleetness of the deer or the keen sight
of the eagle. A similar quality is observed in the meanest
beggar at a shop door. He is not a welcome visitor, albeit
so frequent in his appearances. But his patience is unfailing,
and his perseverance invariably wins its modest reward, a
single brass cash.
There is a story of an Arab whose turban was stolen by
some unknown person, upon which the loser of this important
PATIENCE AND PERSEVERANCE 155
article of apparel promptly betook himself to the tribal burial-
place and seated himself at the entrance. Upon being asked
his reason for this strange behaviour, and why he did not pur-
sue the thief, he made the calm and characteristically Oriental
reply, " He must come here at last! " One is not infrequently
reminded of this exaggeration of passive persistence, not only
in the behaviour of individual Chinese, but in the acts of
the government as well. The long and splendid reign of the
Emperor K'ang Hsi, lasting from 1662 until 1723, made his
name more celebrated than that of any other Asiatic monarch.
Yet it was in the reign of this greatest of Chinese rulers that
the Chinese patriotic pirate, known under the name of Kox-
inga, ravaged the coasts of the provinces of Kuangtung and
Fukien to such a degree that the government junks were
totally unable to cope with him. Under these circumstances,
K'ang Hsi hit upon the happy expedient of ordering all the
people inhabiting this extended coast line to retire into the
interior to a distance of thirty //, or about nine miles, at which
point they were inaccessible even to such stout attacks as this
adherent of the old order of things was able to make. This
strange command was generally obeyed, and was quite suc-
cessful in accomplishing its design. Koxinga retired, baffled
in his plans, and contented himself with driving the Dutch
out of Formosa, and was eventually ennobled under the title
of the " Sea-quelling Duke," by which means he was at once
pacified and extinguished. Every foreigner reading this
singular account is impelled to assent to the comment of the
author of the " Middle Kingdom," that a government which
was strong enough to compel such a number of maritime sub-
jects to leave their towns and villages, and to retire at such
great loss into the interior, ought to have been strong enough
to equip a fleet and to put an end to the attacks upon these
cfesolated homes.
Another example of the persistence of the Chinese govern-
156 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
ment is not less remarkable, and is still fresh in the minds
of foreign residents in China. In the year 1873 the Chinese
General Tso Tsung-tang established himself in Barkoul and
Hami, having been sent by the government to endeavour
to put a stop to the great Mohammedan rebeUion, which, be-
ginning with a mere spark, had spread hke wildfire all over
western China and through Central Asia. The difficulties to
be overcome were so great as to appear almost insuperable.
It was then common to meet with articles in the foreign press
in China ridicuHng both the undertaking of Tso and the fatu-
ity of the government in endeavouring to raise money by
loans, in order to pay the heavy war expenses thus incurred.
Within a year of his arrival in the rebellious districts, Tso's
army was marching on either side of the lofty T'ien-shan in
parallel columns, driving the rebels before them. When they
reached a country in which the supplies were insufficient, the
army was turned into a farming colony and set to cultivating
the soil with a view to raising crops for their future support.
Thus alternately planting and marching, the "agricultural
army " of Tso thoroughly accomplished its work, an achieve-
ment which has been thought to be among " the most remark-
able in the annals of any modem country."
That quality of Chinese patience which to us seems the
most noteworthy of all, is its capacity to wait without com-
plaint and to bear with calm endurance. It has been said
that the true way to test the real disposition of a human being
is to study his behaviour when he is cold, wet, and hungry.
If that is satisfactory, take the individual in question, " warm
him, dry him, and fill him up, and you have an angel."
There is a conviction which often finds utterance in current
literature, that it is as dangerous to meet an Englishman de-
prived of his dinner as a she-bear robbed of her cubs, and it
is not easy to perceive why the truth which underlies this
statement is not as apphcable to all Anglo-Saxons as to the
PATIENCE AND PERSE ITERANCE 157
inhabitants of the British Isles. With all our boasted civilisa-
tion we are under bondage to our stomachs.
The writer once saw about one hundred and fifty Chinese,
most of whom had come several miles in order to be present
at a feast, meet a cruel disappointment. Instead of being
able, as was expected, to sit down at about ten o'clock to the
feast, which was for many of them the first meal of the day,
owing to a combination of unforeseen circumstances they
were compelled to stand aside and act as waiters on about as
many more individuals. The latter ate with relish and that
deliberation which is a trait of Chinese civilisation in which
it is far in advance of our own. Before the meal for which
they had so long and so patiently waited could be served, an-
other delay became necessary, as unforeseen as the first, and
far more exasperating. What did these hundred and fifty
outraged persons do? If they had been inhabitants of the
British Isles, or even of some other portions of " nominally
Christian lands," we know very well what they would have
done. They would have worn looks of sour discontent, and
would have spent the entire day until three o'clock in the
afternoon, when it was at last possible to sit down, in growl-
ing at their luck, and in snarling at their environment generally.
They would have passed fiery resolutions, and have " written
a letter with five ' Now, Sirs,' to the London Times." The
hundred and fifty Chinese did nothing whatever of the sort,
and were not only good-tempered all day, but repeatedly
observed to their hosts with evident sincerity and with true
pohteness that it was of no consequence whatever that they
had to wait, and that one time was to them exactly as good
as another! Does the reader happen to know of any form
of Occidental civilisation which would have stood such a
sudden and severe strain as that?
That Chinese nerves are totally different from those with
which we are endowed has been already shown, but that does
158 CHINESE CH/iRACTERISTICS
not prove that the " obtuse-nerved Turanian " is a stoic like
the North American Indian. The Chinese bear their ills not
only with fortitude, but, what is often far more difficult, with
patience. A Chinese who had lost the use of both eyes applied
to a foreign physician to know if the sight could be restored,
adding simply that if it could not be restored he should stop
being anxious about it. The physician told him that nothing
could be done, upon which the man remarked, "Then my
heart is at ease." His was not what we call resignation,
much less the indifference of despair, but merely the quality
which enables us to " bear the ills we have." We have come
to recognise worry as the bane in oiu: modem life, the rust
which corrodes the blade far more than the hardest use can
destroy it. It is well for the Chinese that they are gifted with
the capacity not to worry, for taking the race as a whole, there
are comparatively few who do not have some very practical
reason for deep anxiety. Vast districts of this fertile Empire
are periodically subject to drought, flood, and, in consequence,
to famine. Social calamities, such as lawsuits, and disasters
even more dreaded because indefinite, overhang the head of
thousands, but this fact would never be discovered by the ob-
server. We have often asked a Chinese whose possession of
his land, his house, and sometimes of his wife, was disputed,
what the outcome would be. "There will never be any
peace," is a common reply. "And when will the matter
come to a head ? " " Who knows ? " is the frequent answer ;
" it may be early or it may be late, but there is sure to be
trouble in plenty." For life imder such conditions what can
be a better outfit than an infinite capacity for patience?
The exhibition of Chinese patience which is likely to make
the strongest impression upon a foreigner, is that which is
unfortunately so often to be seen in all parts of the Empire,
when the calamities to which reference has just been made
have been realised upon an enormous scale. The provinces
PATIENCE AND PERSEVERANCE 159
of China with which foreigners are most familiar are seldom
altogether free from disasters due to flood, drought, and re-
sultant famine. The recollection of the terrible sufferings in
the famine of 1877-78, which involved untold millions of
people, will not soon fade from the memories of those who
were witnesses of that distress. Since then the woes inflicted
upon extensive regions by the overflows of the Yellow River,
and by its sudden change of channel, have been past all com-
putation or comprehension. Some of the finest parts of sev-
eral different provinces have been devastated, and fertile soil
has been buried a fathom deep in bhghting sands of desola-
tion. Thousands of villages have been annihilated, and the
wretched inhabitants who have escaped death by flood have
been driven forth as wanderers on the face of the earth, with-
out homes and without hope. Great masses of human beings,
suddenly ruined and reduced to desperation by no fault of
their own, are not agi'eeable objects of contemplation to any
government. Self-preservation is the first law of nature, and
what is more natural than that those who, through no pre-
ventable causes, have been suddenly brought to starvation,
should combine to compel those who have food to share with
those who have none?
While it is true that relief is extended in a certain way in
some large cities, and where the poor sufferers are most con-
gregated, it is also true that this relief is limited in quantity,
brief in duration, and does not provide the smallest remedy
for more than a minute percentage of even the worst distress.
Towards the prolongation of the lives of those who suffer from
great calamities, the government feels itself able to do but a
trifle. Towards the reclamation of their land, the reconstruc-
tion of their houses, and the resumption of hfe under new
conditions, the government does nothing whatever. It does
all that the people expect if it remits its taxes, and it frequently
does not remit them until it has been again and again demon-
l6o CHINESE CHAR/tCTERISTICS
strated to the district magistrate that out of nething nothing
comes. To a foreigner from the lands of the West, where the
revolutionary cry of "Bread, bread, or blood!" has become
familiar, it is hard to understand why the hordes of homeless,
famishing, and desperate refugees, who roam over the prov-
inces bhghted by flood or famine, do not precipitate them-
selves in a mass upon the district magistrate of the region
where they have been ruined, and demand some form of
succour. It is true that the magistrate would be quite power-
less to give them what they demand, but he would be forced
to do something, and this would be a precedent for something
more. If he failed to " tranquillise " the people he would be
removed, and some other official put in his place. To repeated
and pressing inquiries put to the Chinese in the great famine
as to the reasons why some such plan was not taken, the in-
variable answer was in the words, " Not dare." It is vain to
argue, in reply to this statement, that one might as well be
killed for rebellion, albeit unjustly, as to starve to death — nay,
much better. The answer is still the same, " Not dare, not
dare."
There seem to be two reasons why the Chinese do not
adopt some such course. They are a most practical people,
and by a kind of instinct the futility of the plan is recognised,
and hence it would be next to impossible to effect the needed
combination. But we must believe that the principal reason
is the unhmited capacity of the Chinese for patient endurance.
This it is which brings about one of the most melancholy
spectacles to be seen in China, that of thousands of persons
quietly starving to death within easy reach of overflowing
abundance. The Chinese are so accustomed to this strange
sight that they are hardened to it, as old veterans disregard
the horrors of battle. Those who suffer these evils have been
all their lives confronted by them, although at a little distance.
When the disaster comes it is therefore accepted as alike in-
PATIENCE AND PERSEyERANCE i6l
evitable and remediless. If those who are overtaken by it
can trundle their famihes on wheelbarrows off to some region
where a bare subsistence can be begged, they will do that.
If the family cannot be kept together, they will disperse,
picking up what they can, and reuniting if they succeed in
pulling through the distress. If no relief is to be had near at
hand, whole caravans will beg their way a journey of a thou-
sand miles in mid-winter to some province where they hope
to find that the crops have been better, that labour is more in
demand, and that the chances of survival are greater. If the
floods have abated, the mendicant farmer returns to his home
long enough to scratch a crack in the mud while it is still too
soft to bear the weight of an animal for ploughing, and in this
tiny rift he deftly drops a little seed wheat, and again goes
his devious way, begging a subsistence until his small harvest
shall be ripe. If Providence favours him he becomes once
more a farmer, and no longer a beggar, but with the distinctly
recognised possibility of ruin and starvation never far away.
It has always been thought to be a powerful argument for
the immortaUty of the soul, that its finest powers often find in
this hfe no fit opportunity for expansion. If this be a valid
argument, is there not reason to infer that the unequalled
patient endurance of the Chinese race must have been de-
signed for some nobler purpose than merely to enable them
to bear with fortitude the ordinary ills of life and the miseries
of gradual starvation? If it be the teaching of history that
the fittest survive, then surely a race with such a gift, backed
by a splendid vitality, must have before it a great future.
CHAPTER XVIII.
CONTENT AND CHEERFULNESS.
WE have already seen that the capacity of the Chinese to
bear the ills they have, is a wonderful, and to us in most
"cases an incomprehensible talent, which has well been called
a psychological paradox. Notwithstanding their apparently u .
hopeless condition, they do not appear to lose hope, or rather, ^T"
they seem to struggle on without it and often against it. We
do not perceive among them that restlessness which charac-
terises the people of most other nations, especially towards the
close of the nineteenth century. They do not cherish plans
which seem to them to lead ultimately to " a good time com-
ing," and they do not appear to suppose that there is any such
time to be expected.
But the terms "patience" and "perseverance" by no means
cover the whole field of the Chinese virtues in this direction.
"We must also take account of their quietness of mind in con-
iiitions often very unfavourable to it, and of that chronic state
of good spirits which we designate by the term "cheerful-
ness." Our main object is to call attention to the existence
of such virtues ; yet we may perhaps be able incidentally to
suggest certain considerations which in part help to account
for them.
By the term "contentedness" we do not mean to imply that
any individual in China is satisfied with what he possesses in
such a way and to such a degree that he does not wish to bet-
ter his condition. The contentedness of the Chinese, as we
162
* ,A^
■CONTENT AND CHEERFULNESS 163
have seen in speaking of their conservatism, is most conspicu- )
ously seen when we consider the system vmder which they hve. • ,j(, ^' "' ' ^
That system they do not wish to change. That this is thej r,}, .
temper of the great mass of the Chinese, we have no doubt
whatever. It is a mode of viewing the phenomena of hfe
which we designate by the general name " conservative," and
of this the Chinese are as conspicuous examples as any people
of whom we have any record. It must be evident that such
conceptions of Chinese society, permeating the whole mass of
the people and inherited from distant ages, powerfully tend to
repress any practical exhibitions of discontent with the allot-
ments of fortune. Evils of course they feel, but these are
considered to be inevitable. Persons who seriously and uni-
formly take this view are not the ones who are likely to en-
deavour to upset the estabhshed order of things simply be-
cause the pressure upon themselves is severe. In no country
is the educated class more really a leader of thought and ac-
tion than in China. But the educated class is firmly persuaded
that for China and the Chinese the present system is the best/
obtainable. Their vast and varied experience in the long
reach of Chinese history has taught the Chinese by convinc-
ing object-lessons that solid, practical improvements in their
system are not to be got for the trying. Their adamantine
conservatism is the slow outgrowth of this experience.
Without being fully aware of the fact, the Chinese are a' l^^^~
nation of fatalists. There is a great deal in the Classics about' | « y^J'^-''''^
the "decreegof heaven." There is a great deal in popular f AA-^*-^
speech about " heaven's will." Expressions of this sort often \
bear a close analogy to the manner in which we speak of
Providence. But there is this radical distinction in the under-
lying thought : to us " Providence " signifies the care and fore-
thought of a Being who is in distinct relations to all creatures
that on earth do dwell, all of whom are included in His thought
and forethought ; to the Chinese, whose practical conception
-v^-
/
i64 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
of "heaven" is an altogether impereonal one and utterly vague,
whatever the mode of expression, the practical aspect of the
matter is simply that of fate. " Good fate " and " bad fate "
are phrases which have to the Chinese a meaning similar to
that conveyed by the expressions in children's story-books,
" good fairy " and " bad fairy." By means of these mysterious
agencies anything whatever can be done, anything whatever
can be undone.
The whole complicated theory and practice of Chinese geo-
mancy, necromancy, and fortune-telling, are based upon the
play and interplay of forces which are visibly expressed by
means of straight lines. The number of Chinese who make a
living out of these theories of the universe practically applied,
is past all estimation. While the extent to which such super-
stitions influence the daily life of the people varies greatly in
different parts of the Empire, they are everywhere real and
living factors in the minds of the masses. Nothing is more
common than to hear an especially unfortunate Chinese man
or woman remark, " It is my fate." The natural outcome of
such a creed would be to cause despair, or if the hopefulness
with which mankind, and especially the Chinese, are merci-
fully endowed come to the rescue, to urge them to a patient
biding till their time shall come, and fate shall again favour
them. Perhaps the Chinese are not as consistent fatalists as
the Turks, and perhaps the " fate " of the Chinese is not iden-
tical with " Kismet " ; but it is evident that a people so per-
suaded of the existence of fate as are the Chinese, must be in-
disposed for violent struggles against what they believe to be,
in the nature of things, unavoidable.
It is a venerable observation of the Greeks that history is
philosophy teaching by examples. As we have just seen, their
own history has been the teacher of the Chinese, and the
lessons which they have drawn are all of a conservative char-
acter. But no nation is educated by simply knowing its own
CONTENT AND CHEERFULNESS
165
annals, as no man can be said to know anything who knows
only what has happened to himself. It is at this point that
Chinese knowledge is fatally defective. Of those great epi-
sodes in modern history which we denote by the expressions
the Renaissance, the Reformation, the discovery of America,
and the birth of modem science, the Chinese know nothing.
By those influences which brought nations into a more intimate
contact than ever before, and which have slowly developed a
conception of the rights of man, the Chinese as a people have
been totally unaffected.
The improvement of the condition of the people is not a
living issue to those who exist and have all their being in the
extinct dynasties of the past. The application of the great
laws of political economy to the advantage of all departments
of the state, has no attractions to those who know no more
of political economy than our ancestors at the time of the
crusades, and who would not care for it if they did know of
it. The first impulse to improvement comes from seeing the
superior condition of others. The vast mass of the Chinese
people do not see any evidence of such a better condition
elsewhere, because they know nothing whatever about other
countries. Those, on the other hand, who do know some-
thing of such countries, and who might know much more, are
chained by fetters of conservatism. Nothing really beneficial
to the masses can be done, except upon a large scale, and no
body of persons in China capable of working upon a large
scale wishes anything done in these lines. While this does
not of itself promote content among the masses, it strangles
any effective manifestation of discontent before it can find
expression. Thus, viewed from the social standpoint, Chinese
contentedness is the antithesis of progress, and interdicts it.
We have already spoken of the fact that Chinese experience
is against the practicability of any amelioration of the con-
dition of the people by means which are at hand. To the
J-
1 66 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
foreigner, acquainted with the experience of other lands in
modern times, the simple, obvious, indispensable recipe for the
relief of many of the ills to which the Chinese are subject, is
. , emigration. This we know from induction to be the rem-
j: '^^ edy which the Chinese could adopt most easily, and with the
■■''^ A-*~* greatest assurance of success. But this is an expedient which
<yr^ the Chinese themselves will never adopt, for the reason that
it will take them away from the home of their fathers and
from the graves of their ancestors, to which, by the theory of
Confucianism, they are inexorably linked. Generally speak-
ing, no Chinese will leave his home to seek his fortune at a
distance, unless he is in some way driven to do so. His ideal
of life is to be
" Fixed like a plant on his peculiar spot,
To draw nutrition, propagate, and rot."
Generally speaking, no Chinese leaves his home not intending
to return. His hope is always to come back rich, to die and
be buried where his ancestors are buried. As long as this
fatal "thirst for decomposing under the immediate feet of
their posterity " continues to be the principal passion of the
Chinese, so long will they be debarred from the one obvious
method by which their ills might be effectually lightened.
Real amelioration of the condition of the mass of the Chinese
people where they are, we believe to be well-nigh impossible,
and transplantation on any adequate scale they would not
tolerate except as a decree of "fate." An unconscious con-
sciousness of this state of things checks the expression of a dis-
content which has abundant cause to make itself heard.
But what we have thus far said in elucidation of the peculiar
Chinese faculty of being contented, to which we in Western
lands have nothing corresponding, fails after all to go to the
root of the matter. The truth seems to be that the Chinese
is a being formed for contentment, as the fin of the fish is
CONTENT AND CHEERFULNESS 167
formed for the water, or the wing of the bird for the air. He
is what he calls " heaven-endowed " with a talent for industryj
for peace, and for social order. He is gifted with a matchless
patience, and with unparalleled forbearance under ills the
causes of which are perceived to be beyond his reach. As a
rule, he has a happy temperament, no nervous system to speak
of, and a digestion like that of the ostrich. For these reasons,
and others which we have imperfectly expressed, instead of
spending his energies in butting against stone walls, which he
has found to be more or less unyielding, he simply submits for
the most part without serious complaint to what he cannot
help. He acts in the spirit of the old adage, " What can't be
cured must be endured." In short, a Chinese knows how to
abound, and he knows how to want, and, what is of capital
importance, he knows how to be contented in either condition.
The cheerfulness of the Chinese, which we must regard as
a national characteristic, is intimately connected with their
contentedness of mind. To be happy is more than they ex- '
pect, but, unlike us, they are generally willing to be as happy
as they can. Inordinate fastidiousness is not a common Chi-
nese failing. They are generally model guests. Any place
will do, any food is good enough for them. Even the mul-
titudes who are insufficiently clothed and inadequately fed,
preserve their serenity of spirit in a way which to us appears
marvellous.
An almost universal illustration of Chinese cheerfulness is
to be foimd in their sociability, in striking contrast to the glum
exclusiveness so often characteristic of the Anglo-Saxon. One
of the main enjoyments of the Chinese seems to be chatting
with one another, and whether they are old friends or perfect
strangers makes very little difference. That this appreciation
of human society is a great alleviation of many of the mis-
eries which the Chinese suffer, cannot be doubted.
It is also to be noted that many Chinese have the happy art
'■•/-L.'-
CA-
J^l
1 68 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
of adorning their very humble surroundings with plants and
flowers, of which they are extremely fond. This is but an in-
articulate way of saying, " We have not much, but we make
the most of what we have."
Many as are the criticisms which we perhaps justly make
upon our Chinese servants, it is only fair to mention that they
will frequently submit to serious inconveniences, and will do
extra work for many persons for a great length of time, not
only without complaint, but often with an apparent uncon-
sciousness that there is anything to complain of.
The Chinese who is in the service of others and is in the
habit of bewailing his hard fate, is often laughed at by his
companions, and sometimes he becomes a by-word and a
proverb. Of the tireless industry of the Chinese we have
already spoken, but it is noteworthy that those whose spindle
is heard till after midnight, working it may be in the dark in
order to save a farthing's worth of oil, are not the ones whose
mouths are filled with bitter plaints. They rise early and toil
late, and they do so as a matter of course. Some of those
whose labour is most exhausting, as coolies, boat-trackers,
and wheelbarrow men, not only are not heard to mm-mur at
the unequal distribution of this world's goods, but when they
have opportunities of resting do so in excellent spirits, and
with an evident enjoyment of their humble fare. Discerning
travellers have often called attention to this very significant
trait of the Chinese workman. In Mr. Hosie's " Three Years
in Western China," he says, speaking of the upper Yang-tze :
" The trackers, too, deserve a word of mention. They were,
with the exception of the musician and the diver, almost all
lithe young fellows, always willing to jump on shore, never
spending more than a quarter of an hour over their rice and
vegetables, and never out of temper." Mr. Archibald Little,
in his " Through the Yang-tze Gorges, " bear.** a similar testi-
CONTENT AND CHEERFULNESS 169
mony: "Our five trackers dung on their hands and feet to
the jagged rocks, as they pulled the boat up inch by inch. I
cannot sufficiently admire the pluck and endurance of these
poor coolies, earning but two dollars in cash for the two
months' voyage, and getting three meals of coarse rice, fla-
voured with a little fried cabbage, for their sustenance, upon
which they are called to put forth their strength from dawn
to dark daily."
The writer is acquainted with a Chinese who was employed
by a foreigner in pushing a heavy barrow, on journeys often
months in duration. Upon these trips it was necessary to start
early, to travel late, to transport heavy loads over steep and
rugged mountains, in all seasons and in all weathers, fording
chilling rivers with bare feet and legs, and at the end of every
stage to prepare his master's food and lodging. All this labo-
rious work was done for a very moderate compensation, and
always without complaint, and at the end of several years of
this service his master testified that he had never once seen
this servant out of temper! Is there any reader of these lines
of whom, imitatis mutandis, the same statement could be truth-
fully made?
Perhaps it is in time of sickness that the innate cheerful- f ci<
ness of the Chinese disposition shows to most advantage. As'
a rule, they take the most optimistic view, or, at all events, wish
to seem to do so, both of their own condition and of that of
others. Their cheery hopefulness often does not forsake them
even in physical weakness and in extreme pain. We have
known multitudes of cases where Chinese patients, suffering
from every variety of disease, frequently in deep poverty, not
always adequately nourished, at a distance from their homes,
sometimes neglected or even abandoned by their relatives, and
with no ray of hope for the future visible, yet maintained a
cheerful equanimity of temper, which was a constant albeit an
lyo CHINESE CHARyiCTERISTlCS
unintentional rebuke to the nervous impatience which, under
like circumstances, would be sure to characterise the Anglo-
Saxon.
Chinese endued with this happy temperament we believe to
be by no means rare. Every one of much experience in China
has met them. We repeat that if the teaching of history as
to what happens to " the fittest " is to be trusted, there is a
magnificent future for the Chinese race.
Interior of a Mohammedan Mosque.
CHAPTER XIX.
FILIAL PIETY.
TO discuss the characteristics of the Chinese without men-
tioning filial piety, is out of the question. But the filial
piety of the Chinese is not an easy subject to treat. These
words, like many others which we are obliged to employ, have
among the Chinese a sense very different from that which we
are accustomed to attach to them, and a sense of which no
English expression is an exact translation. This is also true
of a great variety of terms used in Chinese, and of no one
more than of the word ordinarily rendered " ceremony " (//'),
with which filial piety is intimately connected. To illustrate
this, and at the same time to furnish a background for what
we have to say of the characteristic under discussion, we can-
not do better than to cite a passage from M. Callery (quoted
in the "Middle Kingdom ") : " Ceremony epitomises the entire
Chinese mind ; and in my opinion, the Book of Rites '\% per se
the most exact and complete monograph that China has been
able to give of herself to other nations. Its affections, if it
has any, are satisfied by ceremony ; its duties are fulfilled by
ceremony ; its virtues and vices are referred to ceremony ; the
natural relations of created beings essentially link themselves
in ceremonial — in a word, to that people ceremonial is man
as a moral, political, and religious being, in his multiphed
relations with family, society, and rehgion." Every one must
agree in Dr. WiUiams's comment upon this passage, that it
shows how " meagre a rendering is ' ceremony ' for the Chi-
nese idea of //, for it includes not only the external conduct,
171
172 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
but involves the right principles from which all true etiquette
and politeness spring."
One of the most satisfactory methods to ascertain the
Chinese view of filial piety would be to trace the instruction
which is contained on this subject in the Four Books, and in
the other Classics, especially in the " Filial Piety Classic."
Our present object is merely to direct attention to the doctrine
as put into practice by the Chinese, of whom filial piety, in
the sense in which they understand it, is not merely a char-
acteristic but a pecuHarity. It must be remembered that
Chinese filial piety is many-sided, and the same things are
not to be seen in all situations or by all observers.
At the Missionary Conference held in Shanghai in the year
1877, a paper was read by Dr. Yates on "Ancestral Worship,"
in which he embodied the results of his thirty years' experience
in China. In one of the opening sentences of this elaborate
essay, the author, after speaking of ancestral worship con-
sidered merely as a manifestation of fiUal piety, continues :
" The term ' filial ' is misleading, and we should guard against
being deceived by it. Of all the people of whom we have any
knowledge, the sons of the Chinese are most unfilial, disobe-
dient to parents, and pertinacious in having their own way
from the time they are able to make known their wants."
Dr. Legge, the distinguished translator of the Chinese Clas-
sics, who retired from China after thirty-three years' experi-
ence, has quoted this passage from Dr. Yates, for the purpose
of most emphatically dissenting from it, declaring that his
experience of the Chinese has been totally different. This
merely illustrates the familiar truth that there is room for
honest difference of opinion among men, as among ther-
mometers, and that a correct view can only be reached by
combining results that appear to be absolutely inharmonious
into a whole that shall be even more comprehensive than
either of its parts.
FILIAL PIETY 173
That Chinese children have no proper discipline, that they
are not taught to obey their parents, and that as a rule they
have no idea of prompt obedience as we understand it, is a
most indubitable fact attested by wide experience. But that
the later years of these imgoverned or half-governed children
generally do not exhibit such results as we should have ex-
pected, appears to be not less a truth. The Chinese think and
say that " the crooked tree, when it is large, will straighten
itself," by which metaphor is figured the belief that children
when grown will do the things which they ought to do. How-
ever it may be in regard to other duties, there really appears
to be some foundation for this theory in the matter of filial
behaviour. The occasion of this phenomenon seems to he in
the nature of the Chinese doctrine of filial piety, the manner
in which it is taught, and the prominence which is everywhere
given to it. It is said in the " Filial Piety Classic " that :
" There are three thousand crimes to which one or the other
of the five kinds of punishment is attached as a penalty, and
of these no one is greater than disobedience to parents."
One of the many sayings in common circulation runs as fol-
lows : " Of the hundred virtues filial conduct is the chief, but
it must be judged by the intentions, not by acts ; for, judged
by acts, there would not be a filial son in the world." The
Chinese are expressly taught that a defect of any virtue, when
traced to its root, is a lack of filial piety. He who violates
propriety is deficient in filial conduct. He who serves his
prince but is not loyal lacks filial piety. He who is a magis-
trate without due respect for its duties is lacking in filial piety.
He who does not show proper sincerity towards his friends
lacks filial piety. He who fails to exhibit coiu-age in battle
lacks filial piety. Thus the doctrine of filial conduct is seen
to embrace much more than mere acts, and descends into the
motives, taking cognisance of the whole moral being.
In the popular apprehension, the real basis of the virtue of
174 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
filial conduct is felt to be gratitude. This is emphasised in
the " Filial Piety Classic," and in the chapter of the Sacred
Edicts on the subject. The justification of the period of
three years' mourning is found, according to Confucius, in
the undoubted social fact that " for the first three years of its
existence the child is not allowed to leave the arms of its
parents," as if the one term were in some way an offset for
the other. The young lamb is proverbially a type of filial
behaviour, for it has the grace to kneel when sucking its dam.
Filial piety demands that we should preserve the bodies which
our parents gave us, otherwise we seem to slight their kind-
ness. Filial piety requires that we should serve our parents
while they live, and worship them when dead. Filial piety
requires that a son should follow in the steps of his father.
" If for the three years he does not alter from the way of his
father," says Confucius, "he may be called fiUal." But if
the parents are manifestly in the wrong, filial piety does not
forbid an attempt at their reformation, as witness the fol-
lowing, quoted by Dr. Williams from the Book of Rites:
" When his parents are in error, the son, with a humble spirit,
pleasing countenance, and gentle tones, must point it out to
them. If they do not receive his reproof, he must strive
more and more to be dutiful and respectful to them till they
are pleased, and then he must again point out their error.
But if he does not succeed in pleasing them, it is better that
he should continue to reiterate reproof than permit them to
do injury to the whole department, district, village, or neigh-
bourhood. And if the parents, irritated and displeased, chas-
tise their son till the blood flows from him, even then he must
not dare to harbour the least resentment ; but on the contrary,
should treat them with increased respect and dutifulness."
It is to be feared that in most Western lands the admonition
of parents upon these terms would be allowed to fall into
FILIAL PIETY 175
desuetude, and it is not to be wondered that we do not hear
much of it even in China!
In the second book of the " Confucian Analects " we find
record of several different answers which Confucius gave as
to the nature of fiUal piety, his replies being varied according
to the circumstances of the questioners. The first answer
which is mentioned is that to an officer of the State of Lu,
and is comprised in the compendious expression "wu-wei,"
which he apparently left in the mind of the querist as a kind
of seed to be developed by time and reflection. The words
" wu-wei " simply mean " not disobedient," and it is natural
that Mang I, the officer who had inquired, so understood
them. But Confucius, like the rest of his countrymen since,
had a " talent for indirection," and instead of explaining him-
self to Mang I, he waited until some time later when one of
Confucius' disciples was driving him out, when the Master
repeated the question of Mang I to this disciple, and also the
reply. The disciple, whose name was Fan Ch'ih, on hearing
the words "wu-wei," very naturally asked, "What did you
mean ? " which gave the Master the requisite opportunity to
tell what he really meant, in the following words: "That
parents when ahve should be served according to propriety,
that when dead they should be buried according to propriety,
and that they should be sacrificed to according to propriety."
The conversation between Confucius and Fan Ch'ih was in-
tended by the former to lead the latter to report it to Mang I,
who would thus discover what was meant to be inferred from
the words "wu-wei"! In other answers of the Master to
the question. What is denoted by filial piety? Confucius laid
stress upon the requirement that parents should be treated
with reverence, adding that when they are not so treated,
mere physical care for them is on a plane with the care be-
stowed upon dogs and horses.
176 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
These passages have been quoted in this connection, to
show that the notion that filial piety consists largely in com-
pliance with the wishes of parents, and in furnishing them
what they need and what they want, is a very ancient idea
in China. Confucius expressly says : " The filial piety of the
present time means (only) the support of one's parents,"
implying that in ancient times, of Avhich he was so fond, and
which he wished to revive, it was otherwise. Many ages
have elapsed since these conversations of the Master took
place, and his doctrine has had time to penetrate the marrow
of the Chinese people, as indeed it has done. But if Confu-
cius were alive to-day, there is good reason to think that he
would affirm more emphatically than ever, " The filial piety
of the present time means only the support of one's parents."
That the popular conscience responds to the statement of the
claims of filial piety, as to no other duty, has been already
observed, but in the same connection it ought to be clearly
understood what this filial piety is supposed to connote. If
ten uneducated persons, taken at random, were to be asked
what they mean by being "filial," it is altogether probable
that nine of them would reply, " Not letting one's parents get
angry," that is, because they are not properly served. Or, in
a more condensed form, filial piety is " wu-wei," " not dis-
obedient," which is what the Master said it is, albeit he used
the words in " a Pickwickian sense."
If any of our readers wish to see this theory in a practical
form, let them consider the four-and-twenty ensamples of
filial piety, immortalised in the familiar little book called by
that name. In one of these cases, a boy who lived in the
"After Han Dynasty," at the age of six paid a visit to a
friend, by whom he was entertained with oranges. The pre-
cocious youth on this occasion executed the common Chinese
feat of stealing two oranges, and thrusting them up his sleeve.
But as he was making his parting bows the fruit rolled out,
FILIAL PIETY 1 77
and left the lad in an embarrassing situation, to which, how-
ever, he was equal. Kneeling down before his host, he made
the memorable observation which has rendered his name
illustrious for nearly two millenniums: "My mother loves
oranges very much, and I wanted them for her." As this
lad's father was an officer of high rank, it would seem to an
Occidental critic that the boy might have enjoyed other op-
portunities for gratifying her desire for oranges, but to the
Chinese the lad is a classic instance of filial devotion, because
at this early age he was thoughtful for his mother, or perhaps
so quick at inventing an excuse. Another lad, of the Chin
Dynasty, whose parents had no mosquito nets, at tlie age of
eight hit upon the happy expedient of going to bed very early,
lying perfectly quiet all night, not even brandishing a fan,
in order that the family mosquitoes might gorge themselves
upon him alone, and allow his parents to sleep in peace!
Another lad of the same dynasty lived with a stepmother who
disliked him, but as she was very fond of carp, which were
not to be obtained during the winter, he adopted the injudi-
cious plan of taking off his clothes and lying on the ice, which
so impressed a brace of carp who had observed the proceed-
ing from the under side that they made a hole in the ice and
leaped forth in order to be cooked for the benefit of the iras-
cible stepmother!
According to the Chinese teaching, one of the instances of
unfilial conduct is found in " selfish attachment to wife and
children." In the chapter of the Sacred Edict already quoted,
this behaviour is mentioned in the same connection with
gambling, and the exhortations against each are of the same
kind. The typical instance of true fihal devotion among the
twenty-fom: just mentioned, is a man who lived in the Han
Dynasty, and who, being very poor, found that he had not
sufficient food to noiuish both his mother and his child, three
years of age. "We are so poor," he said to his wife, "that
178 CHINESE CH/IRACTERISTICS
we cannot even support mother. Moreover, the httle one
shares mother's food. Why not bury the child? We may
have another, but if mother should die we cannot obtain her
again." His wife dared not oppose him, and accordingly a
hole was dug more than two feet deep, when a vase of gold
was found with a suitable inscription, stating that Heaven
bestowed this reward on a filial son. If the golden vase had
not emerged, the child would have been buried alive, and ac-
cording to the doctrine of filial piety, as commonly understood,
rightly so. " Selfish attachment to wife and children " must
not hinder the murder of a child to prolong the life of its
grandparent.
The Chinese believe that there are cases of obstinate illness
of parents, which can only be cured by the offering of a por-
tion of the flesh of a son or a daughter, which must be cooked
and eaten by the unconscious parent. While the favourable
results are not certain, they are very probable. The Peking
Gazette frequently contains references to cases of this sort.
The Visiter is personally acquainted with a young man who
cut off a slice of his leg to cure his mother, and who exhibited
the scar with the pardonable pride of an old soldier. While
such cases are doubtless not very common, they are probably
not excessively rare.
The most important aspect of Chinese filial piety is indicated
in a saying of Mencius, that : " There are three things which
are unfilial, and to have no posterity is the greatest of them."
The necessity for posterity arises from the necessity for con-
tinuing the sacrifices for ancestors, which is thus made the
most important duty in Hfe. It is for this reason that every
son must be married at as early an age as possible. It is by
no means uncommon to find a Chinese a grandfather by the
time he is thirty-six. An acquaintance of the writer's accused
himself upon his death-bed of having been unfilial in two
particulars: first, that he had not survived long enough to
FILIAL PIETY 179
bury his old mother ; and second, that he had neglected to
arrange for the marriage of his son, a child of about ten years
of age. This view of filial piety would doubtless commend
itself to the average Chinese.
The failure to have male children is mentioned first among
the seven causes for the divorce of a wife. The necessity for
male children has led to the system of concubinage, with all its
attendant miseries. It fiu-nishes a ground, eminently rational
to the Chinese mind, for the greatest delight at the birth of
sons, and a corresponding depression on occasion of the birth
of daughters. It is this aspect of the Chinese doctrine which
is responsible for a large proportion of the enormous infanti-
cide which is known to exist in China. This crime is much
more common in the south of China than in the north, where
it often seems to be wholly unknown. But it must be remem-
bered that it is the most difficult of all subjects upon which to
seciu-e exact information, just in proportion to the public senti-
ment against it. The number of illegitimate children can never
be small, and there is everywhere the strongest motive to de-
stroy all such, whatever the sex. Even if direct testimony to
the destruction of the Hfe of female infants in any region were
much less than it is, it would be a moral certainty that a people
among whom the biuial alive of a child of three in order to
facilitate the support of its grandmother is held to be an act
of filial devotion, could not possibly be free from the guilt of
destroying the lives of unwelcome female infants.
Reference has already been made to the theory of Chinese
mourning for parents, which is supposed to consume three
full years, but which in practice is mercifully shortened to
twenty-seven months. In the seventeenth book of the " Con-
fucian Analects " we read of one of the disciples of the Mas-
ter, who argued stoutly against three years as a period for
mourning, maintaining that one year was enough. To this
the Master conclusively replied that the superior man could
l8o CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
not be happy during the whole three years of mourning, but
that if this particular disciple thought he could be happy by
shortening it a year, he might do so, but the Master plainly
regarded him as "no gentleman."
The observance of this mourning takes precedence of all
other duties whatsoever, and amounts to an excision of so
much of the lifetime of the sons, if they happen to be in gov-
ernment employ. There are instances in which extreme filial
devotion is exhibited by the son's building a hut near the
grave of the mother or father, and going there to live during
the whole time of the mourning. The most common way in
which this is done is to spend the night only at the grave,
while during the day the ordinary occupations are followed
as usual. But there are some sons who will be content with
nothing less than the whole ceremonial, and accordingly exile
themselves for the full period, engaging in no occupation
whatever, but being absorbed by grief. The writer is ac-
quainted with a man of this class, whose extreme devotion to
his parents' grave for so long a time unsettled his mind and
made him a useless bvurden to his family. To the Chinese
such an act is highly commendable, irrespective of its con-
sequences, which are not considered at all. The ceremonial
duty is held to be absolute and not relative.
It is not uncommon to meet with cases of persons who
have sold their land to the last fraction of an acre, and even
pulled down the house and disposed of the timbers, in order
to provide money for a suitable funeral for one or both of the
parents. That such conduct is a social wrong, few Chinese
can be brought to understand, and no Chinese can be brought
to realise. It is accordant with Chinese instinct. It is ac-
cordant with //, or propriety, and therefore it was unquestion-
ably the thing to be done.
The Abb6 Hue gives from his own experience an excellent
example of that ceremonial, filial conduct, which to the Chi-
FILML PIETY i8i
nese is so dear. While the Abb6 was living in the south of
China, during the first year of his residence in this Empire,
he had occasion to send a messenger to Peking, and he be-
thought him that perhaps a Chinese schoolmaster in his em-
ploy, whose home was in Peking, would like to embrace the
rare opportunity to send a message to his old mother, from
whom he had not heard for four years, and who did not know
of her son's whereabouts. Hearing that the courier was to
leave soon, the teacher called to one of his pupils, who was
singing off his lesson in the next room, " Here, take this paper,
and write me a letter to my mother. Lose no time, for the
courier is going at once." This proceeding struck M. Hue
as singular, and he inquired if the lad was acquainted with
the teacher's mother, and was informed that the boy did not
even know that there was such a person. " How then was he
to know what to say, not having been told?" To this the
schoolmaster made the conclusive reply : " Don't he know
quite well what to say? For more than a year he has been
studying hterary composition, and he is acquainted with a
number of elegant formulas. Do you think he does not know
perfectly well how a son ought to write to a mother? " The
pupil soon retvuTied with the letter not only all written, but
sealed up, the teacher merely adding the superscription with
his own hand. The letter would have answered equally well
for any other mother in the Empire, and any other would
have been equally pleased to receive it.
The amount of filial conduct on the part of Chinese children
to their parents will vary in any two places. Doubtless both
extremes are to be found everywhere. Parricides are not
common, and such persons are usually insane, though that
makes no difference in the cruel punishment which they suffer.
But among the common people, groaning in deepest poverty,
some harsh treatment of parents is inevitable. On the other
hand, voluntary substitutions of a son for the father, in cases
1 82 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
of capital punishment, are known to occur, and such instances
speak forcibly for the sincerity and power of the instinct of
fihal devotion to a parent, though this parent may be a deeply
dyed criminal.
To the Occidental, fresh from the somewhat too loose bonds
of family life which not infrequently prevail in lands nominally
Christian, the theory of Chinese filial conduct presents some
very attractive features. The respect for age which it in-
volves is most beneficial, and might profitably be cultivated
by Anglo-Saxons generally. In Western countries, when a
son becomes of age he goes where he likes, and does what he
chooses. He has no necessary connection with his parents,
nor they with him. To the Chinese such customs must ap-
pear like the behaviour of a well-grown calf or colt to the
cow and the mare, suitable enough for animals, but by no
means conformable to //' as applied to human beings. An at-
tentive consideration of the matter from the Chinese stand-
point will show that there is abundant room in our own social
practice for improvement, and that most of us really hve in
glass houses, and would do well not to throw stones recklessly.
Yet, on the other hand, it is idle to discuss the filial piety of
the Chinese without making most emphatic its fatal defects in
several particulars.
This doctrine seems to have five radical faults, two of them
negative and three of them positive. It has volumes on the
duty of children towards parents, but no word on the duty of
parents to children, China is not a country in which advice
of this kind is superfluous. Such advice is everywhere most
needed, and always has been so. It was an inspired wisdom
which led the Apostle Paul to combine in a few brief sen-
tences addressed to his Colossian church the fovu* pillars of
the ideal home : " Husbands, love your wives, and be not
bitter against them," " Wives, submit yourselves unto your
own husbands, as it is fit in the Lord." " Children, obey
FILIAL PIETY 183
your parents in all things, for this is well pleasing unto the
Lord." " Fathers, provoke not your children to anger, lest
they be discouraged." What is there in all Confucian moral-
ity which for practical wisdom can for a moment be put into
competition with these far-reaching principles? The Chinese
doctrine has nothing to say on behalf of its daughters, but
everything on behalf of its sons. If the Chinese eye had not
for ages been colour-blind on this subject, this gross outrage
on human natiu-e could not have failed of detection. By the
accident of sex the infant is a family divinity. By the acci-
dent of sex she is a dreaded burden, Uable to be destroyed,
and certain to be despised.
The Chinese doctrine of filial piety puts the wife on an in-
ferior plane. Confucius has nothing to say of the duties of
wives to husbands or of husbands to wives. Christianity re-
quires a man to leave his father and mother, and cleave to
his wife. Confucianism requires a man to cleave to his father
and mother, and to compel his wife to do the same. If the
relation between the husband and his parents conflicts with
that between the husband and his wife, the latter, as the lesser
and inferior, is the relation which must yield. The whole
structure of Chinese society, which is modelled upon the pa-
triarchal plan, has grave evils. It encourages the suppression
of some of the natural instincts of the heart that other in-
stincts may be cultivated to an extreme degree. It results in
the almost entire subordination of the younger during the
whole life of those who are older. It cramps the minds of
those who are subjected to its iron pressure, preventing de-
velopment and healthful change.
That tenet of the Chinese doctrine which makes filial con-
duct consist in leaving posterity is responsible for a long
train of ills. It compels the adoption of children, whether
there is or is not any adequate provision for their support
It leads to early marriages, and brings into existence millions
184 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
of human beings, who, by reason of the excessive pinch of
poverty, can barely keep soul and body together. It is the
efficient cause of polygamy and concubinage, always and
inevitably a curse. It is expressed and epitomised in the
worship of ancestors, which is the real religion of the Chinese
race. This system of ancestral worship, when rightly under-
stood in its true significance, is one of the heaviest yokes
which ever a people was compelled to bear. As pointed out
by Dr. Yates in the essay to which reference has been already
made, the hundreds of millions of living Chinese are under
the most galling subjection to the countless thousands of mil-
lions of the dead. " The generation of to-day is chained to
the generations of the past." Ancestral worship is the best
type and guarantee of that leaden conservatism to which
attention has already been directed. Until that conservatism
shall have received some mortal wound, how is it possible for
China to adjust herself to the wholly new conditions under
which she finds herself in this last quarter of the century?
And while the generations of those who have passed from the
stage continue to be regarded as the true divinities by the
Chinese people, how is it possible that China should take a
single real step forward ?
The true root of the Chinese practice of filial piety we
believe to be a mixture of fear and self-love, two of the most
powerful motives which can act on the human soul. The
spirits must be worshipped on account of the power which
they have for evil. From the Confucian point of view, it was
a sagacious maxim of the Master, that "to respect spiritual
beings, but to keep aloof from them, may be called wisdom."
If the sacrifices are neglected the spirits will be angry. If
the spirits are angry they will take revenge. It is better to
worship the spirits by way of insurance. This appears to be
a condensed statement of the Chinese theory of all forms of
worship of the dead. As between the living, the process of
FILI/IL PIETY 185
reasoning is equally simple. Every son has perfonned his
filial duties to his father, and demands the same from his own
son. That is what children are for. Upon this point the
popular mind is explicit. " Trees are raised for shade, chil-
dren are reared for old age." Neither parents nor children
are under any illusions upon this subject. " If you have no
children to foul the bed, you will have no one to bum paper
at the grave." Each generation pays the debt which is ex-
acted of it by the generation which preceded it, and in turn
requires from the generation which comes after, full payment
to the uttermost farthing. Thus is filial piety perpetuated from
generation to generation, and from age to age.
It is a melancholy comment upon the exaggerated Chinese
doctrine of piety that it not only embodies no reference to a
Supreme Being, but that it does not in any way lead up to a
recognition of His existence. Ancestral worship, which is |
the most complete and the ultimate expression of this filial
piety, is perfectly consistent with polytheism, with agnos-
ticism, and with atheism. It makes dead men into gods, and
its only gods are dead men. Its love, its gratitude, and its
fears are for earthly parents only. It has no conception of a
-Heavenly P'ather, and feels no interest in such a being when
He is made known. Either Christianity will never be intro-\
duced into China, or ancestral worship will be given up, for )
they are contradictories. In the death struggle between thena/
the fittest only will survive.
CHAPTER XX.
BENEVOLENCE.
THE Chinese have placed the term " benevolence " at the
head of their list of the P"ive Constant Virtues, The char-
acter which denotes it, is composed of the symbols for " man "
and " two," by which is supposed to be shadowed forth the
view that benevolence is something which ought to be devel-
oped by the contact of any two human beings with each other.
It is unnecessary to remark that the theory which the form of
the character seems to favour, is not at all substantiated by
the facts of life among the Chinese, as those facts are to be
read by the intelligent and attentive observer. Nevertheless,
it is far from being true, as a superficial examination would
seem to indicate, that there is among the Chinese no benevo-
lence, though this has been often predicated by those who
ought to have known the truth. " The feeling of pity," as
Mencius reminds us, " is common to all men," widely as they
differ in its expression. The mild and in some respects really
benevolent teachings of the Buddhist religion have not been
without a visible effect upon the Chinese people. There is,
moreover, among the Chinese a strong practical instinct in
every direction, and when the attention has once been directed
towards the " practice of virtue," there is a great variety of
forms in which there is certain to be abundant scope for the
exercise of benevolence.
Among the kinds of benevolence which have commended
themselves to the Chinese may be named the establishment of
l86
BENEVOLENCE 187
foundling hospitals, refuges for lepers and for the aged, and
free schools. As China is a land which for most practical pur-
poses is quite free from a census, it is impossible to ascertain
to what extent these forms of benevolent action are to be
found. Rev. David Hill, who has investigated the charities of
central China, reports thirty benevolent institutions in the city
of Hankow, expending annually some eight thousand pounds
sterling. But it is hazarding little to say that such establish-
ments must be relatively rare ; that is to say, as regards the
enormous population, and the enormous aggregation of that
population in huge hives, where the needs are greatest.
The vast soup-kitchens which are set up anywhere and every-
where when some great flood or famine calls for them are fam-
iliar phenomena, as well as the donation of winter clothing to
those who are destitute. It is not the government only which
engages in these enterprises, but the people also co-operate in
a highly creditable manner, and instances are not uncommon
in which large sums have been thus judiciously expended.
The ordinary streams of refugees which swarm over the coun-
try in a bad year are also allowed to camp down in cart-sheds,
empty rooms, etc., but this is to a considerable extent a neces-
sity. When such refugees come in extensive bands, and meet
in all quarters with repulses, they are certain to be provoked
into some form of reprisal. Common prudence dictates some
concessions to those in such circumstances.
We do not reckon among the benevolences of the Chinese
such associations as the provincial clubs for the care of those
who may be destitute at a distance from home, and who with-
out this help could not return, or who, having died, could not
otherwise be taken home and buried. This is an ordinary
business transaction of the nature of insurance, and is probably
so regarded by the Chinese themselves.
In some of the books which have for their express object
exhortations to " virtue," an account is opened, in which the
i8S CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
individual charges himself with every bad act which he can
remember, and credits himself with every good act. The
balance between the two exhibits his standing at any particu-
lar time in the account books of the Chinese Rhadamanthus.
This system of retributive bookkeeping exhibits clearly the
practical character of the Chinese, already remarked, as well
as their constant and irrepressible tendency to consider the
next life, if there be one, as only an extension and an amplifi-
cation of the present state of existence. The apparent motive
for a large percentage of Chinese benevolence is therefore the
reflex benefit which such acts are expected to insiu^e to the
man who indulges his benevolent impulses. The open avowal
of a selfish motive in all acts of merit sometimes leads to
curious results. In the month of April, 1889, the prefect of
Hangchow attempted to raise funds for the sufferers from the
Yellow River floods, by levying a tax on each cup of tea sold
in the tea-houses of that great city. To the people of that
ancient capital this assessment presented itself in a light simi-
lar to that in which the Bostonians of 1773 regarded the tea
tax of their day. The prefect endeavoured to win the people
over by a proclamation, in which they were informed that
" happiness was sure to be their reward, if they cheerfully con-
tributed to so excellent a cause." The people, however, boy-
cotted the tea-shops, and were in the end entirely victorious.
It is not every day that we are treated to the spectacle of a
cityful of people banded together to resist compulsory " hap-
piness"!
Among the acts by which merit is to be accumulated may
be named the providing of coffins for those too poor to buy
them ; the gathering of human bones which have become ex-
posed, and their reburial in a suitable manner ; the collection
of written or printed paper that it may be burned to save it
from desecration ; and the purchase of live birds and fish,
that they may be restored to their native element. In some
BENEVOLENCE 189
places plasters of a mysterious nature are also given to all
applicants, free vaccination is (theoretically) furnished, and
" virtue books " are provided for sale at a price below cost,
or are even given away. While such works of merit occupy
a very prominent place in Chinese benevolence, so far as our
observation goes, acts of kindly good-will to men and women
occupy a very subordinate place. When such acts occur they
are almost sure to be on some stereotyped pattern, involving
a minimum of trouble and thought on the part of the doer.
It is much easier to stand on the brink of a river, watch a
fisherman lower his net, pay for his entire catch, and throw it
back again into the water, than to look into the cases of the
needy at one's doors, and give help in a judicious manner.
Moreover, to the mind of the practical Chinese there is a
very important difference. As soon as the fish touches the
water or the bird skims the air they are on a wholly self-sup-
porting basis, and that is the end of the work. They will not
expect the man who has released them to provide them and
their numerous families with means of subsistence. For the
man it only remains to register his virtuous act and go about
his business, sure of no disagreeable consequences. But in
China " virtue's door is hard to open," and it is still harder to
shut. No one can possibly foresee all the remote conse-
quences of some well-meant act of kindness, and knowing the
danger of incurring responsibiUty, the prudent will be wary
what they undertake. A missionary living in an interior
province was asked by some native gentlemen to do a kind
act for a poor beggar who was totally blind, and restore to
him his sight. It proved to be a case of cataract, and excel-
lent vision was secured. When the result became certain, the
missionary was waited upon by the same gentlemen, and told
that as he had destroyed the only means by which the blind
man could get a living, that is, by begging, it was the duty of
the missionary to make it up to him by taking him into em-
I9«> CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
ploy as a gatekeeper! Sometimes a benevolent old lady who
is limited in the sphere of her activity makes a practice of
entertaining other old ladies who seem to be deserving, but
who are victims of cruel fate. We have heard of one case of
this sort — and of one only — and they may not be so rare as
is supposed. But after all abatements, it must be admitted
that "real kindness kindly expressed" is not often to be met
in Chinese life.
When a vast calamity occurs, like the great famine, or the
outburst of the Yellow River, the government, local or gen-
eral, often comes to the front with a greater or less degree of
promptness, and attempts to help the victims. But instead
of doing this on any uniform and extensive scale, such as the
perpetual recurrence of the necessity might seem to suggest,
it is done in a makeshift way, as if the occasion had never
before arisen and might never arise again. The care of the
refugees is moreover usually abandoned at the very time when
they most need help, namely, in the early spring, when, having
been weakened by their long suffering and by atrocious over-
crowding, they are most liable to disease. It is then that they
are sent away with a little ready money, to make the best of
their way home, and to get back into their normal state of
life as best they can. The excuses for this are apparent : the
funds are usually exhausted ; there is work to be done on
the farms, if the workers can but get food till wheat harvest.
The government knows that they will die of pestilence if they
remain till warm weather where they are, and destruction in
detail seems to the officials to be a less, because a less con-
spicuous, evil than death in masses.
The same spirit is evinced in the ciu"ious ebullition of chari-
tableness, which is known as the " twelve eight gruel." This
performance may be regarded as a typical case of the most
superficial form of Chinese benevolence. On the eighth day
of the twelfth moon it is the custom for every one who
BENEVOLENCE Ipl
has accumulated a quantity of benevolent impulses, which
have had no opportunity for their gratification, to make the
most liberal donations to all comers, of the very cheapest and
poorest quality of soup, during about twelve hours of solar
time. This is called " practising virtue," and is considered to
be a means of laying up merit. If the year happens to be
one in which the harvest is bountiful, those who live in the
country have perhaps no applicants for their coarse provender,
as even the poorest people have as good or better at home.
This circumstance does not, however, lead to the pretermis-
sion of the offer, much less to the substitution of anything of
a better quality. On the contrary, the donors advertise their
intentions with the same alacrity as in other years, not to say
with greater, and when the day passes, and no one has asked
for a single bowl of the rich gruel designed for them, it is
merely put into the broken jars out of which the pigs are fed,
and the wealthy man of practical benevolence retires to rest
with the proud satisfaction that however it may be with the
poor wretches who would not come to his feast, he at least
has done his duty for another year, and can in good conscience
pose as a man of benevolence and virtue. But if, on the
other hand, the year should be a bad one, and grain rises to
a fabulous price, then this same man of means and of virtue
fails to send out any notices of the " practice of virtue " for
this particular year, for the reason that he " cannot afford it "1
We have already referred to the gifts to beggars, of whom
one almost everywhere sees a swarm. This donation also is
of the nature of an insurance. In the cities the beggars are,
as is well known, organised into guilds of a very powerful
sort, more powerful by far than any with which they can have
to contend, for the reason that the beggars have nothing to
lose and nothing to fear, in which respects they stand alone.
The shopkeeper who should refuse a donation to a stalwart
beggar, after the latter has waited for a reasonable lengtli
I9« CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
of time, and has besought with what the Geneva arbitrators
styled " due diligence," would be liable to an invasion of a
horde of famished wretches, who would render the existence
even of a stolid Chinese a burden, and who would utterly pre-
vent the transaction of any business until their continually
rising demands should be met. Both the shopkeepers and
the beggars understand this perfectly well, and it is for this
reason that benevolences of this nature flow in a steady, be it
a tiny rill.
The same principle, with obvious modifications, applies to
the small donations to the incessant stream of refugees to be
seen so often in so many places. In all these cases it will be
observed that the object in view is by no means the benefit of
the person upon whom the " benevolence " terminates, but the
extraction from the benefit conferred of a return benefit for the
giver. Every such object of Chinese charity is regarded as a
" little Jo," and the main aim of those who have anything to
do with him is to make it reasonably certain that he will
" move on."
To the other disabilities of Chinese benevolence must be
added this capital one, that it is almost impossible for any en-
terprise, however good or however urgent, to escape the with-
ering effects of the Chinese system of squeezes, which is as
well organised as any other part of the scheme of Chinese
government. It is not easy to possess one's self of full details
of the working of any regular Chinese charity, but enough has
been observed during such a special crisis as the great famine,
to make it certain that the deepest distress of the people is no
barrier whatever to the most shameful peculation on the part
of oflScials entrusted with the disbursement of funds for relief.
And if such scandals take place under these circumstances,
when public attention is most fixed on the distress and its re-
lief, it is not difficult to conjecture what happens when there
is no outside knowledge either of the funds contributed or of
their use.
BENEVOLENCE I93
When the Chinese come to know more of that Occidental
civilisation of which too often only the worst side obtrudes
itself upon them, it will certainly seem to them not a httle re-
markable that all Christendom is dotted with institutions such
as have no parallel out of Christendom, and then it will per-
haps occur to them to inquire into the rationale of so significant
a fact. They may be led to notice the suggestive circumstance
that the Chinese character for benevolence, unlike most of
those which relate to the emotions, which generally have the
heart radical, is written without the heart. The virtue for
which it stands is also too often practised without heart, with
the general results which we have noticed. That state of
mind in which practical philanthropy becomes an instinct, de-
manding opportimity to exhibit its workings whenever the need
of it is clearly perceived, may be said to be almost wholly
wanting among the Chinese. It is not, indeed, a htmian de-
velopment. If it is to be created among the Chinese, it must
be by the same process which has made it an integral con-
stituent of life in the lands of the West.
CHAPTER XXI.
THE ABSENCE OF SYMPATHY.
ATTENTION has been directed to that aspect of Chinese
±\. life which is represented by the term " benevolence," the
very first of the so-called Constant Virtues. Benevolence is
well-wishing. Sympathy is fellow-feeling. Our present object,
having premised that the Chinese do practise a certain amount
of benevolence, is to illustrate the proposition that they are
conspicuous for a deficiency of sympathy. .
It must ever be borne in mind that the population of China
is dense. The disasters of flood and famine are of periodical
, occurrence in almost all parts of the Empire. The Chinese
desire for posterity is so overmastering a passion that circum-|
! stances which ought to operate as an effectual check upon
population, and which in many other countries would do so,
appear to be in China relatively inefficient for that purpose.
The very poorest people continue to marry their children at
an early age, and these children bring up large families, just
as if there were any provision for their maintenance. The
result of these and other causes is that a large proportion of
the population lives, in the most literal sense, from hand to
mouth. This may be said to be the universal condition of
day-labourers, and it is a condition from which there appears
to be no possibility of escape. No foreigner can long deal
with the ordinary Chinese whom he everywhere meets, without
at once becoming aware of the fact that hardly any one has
any ready money. The moment that anything whatever is
THE ABSENCE OF SYMPATHY 195
to be done, the first demand is for cash, that those who are to
do it may get something to eat, the presumption being that as
yet they have had nothing. It is often very hard even for
well-to-do people to raise the most moderate sums of m^mey
when it suddenly becomes necessary to do so. There is a
most significant expression commonly employed on such oc-
casions, which speaks of a man who is obliged to collect a sum
with which to prosecute a lawsuit, to arrange for a funeral, and
the like, as " putting through a famine," that is, acting like a
starving person, in the urgency and persistency of his demands
for help. None but those who are well off ever expect lo be
able to manage affairs of this sort without assistance. Hope-!
less poverty is the most prominent fact in the Chinese Empire,'
and the bearing of this fact upon the relations of the people to
one another must be evident to the most careless observer, i
The result of the pressure for the means of subsistence, and
of the habits which this pressure cultivates and fixes, even after
the immediate demand is no longer urgent, is to bring life,
down to a hard materiaUstic basis, in which there are but twof
prominent facts. Money and food are twin foci of the Chinese
ellipse, and it is about them as centres that the whole social lifej
of the people revolves.
The deep poverty of the masses of the people of the Chinese
Empire, and the terrible struggle constantly going on to secure
even the barest subsistence, have familiarised them with the
most pitiable exhibitions of suffering of every conceivable
variety. Whatever might be the benevolent impulses of any
Chinese, he is from the nature of the case wholly helplet's to
relieve even a thousandth part of the misery which he sees
about him all the time — misery multiplied many times in any
year of special distress. A thoughtful Chinese must recognise
the utter futiUty of the means which are employed to alleviate
distress, whether by individual kindness or by government in-
terference. All these methods, even when taken at their best,
|0,<
196 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
amount simply to a treatment of the symptoms, and do abso-
lutely nothing towards removing disease. Their operation is
akin to that of societies which should distribute small pieces of
ice among the victims of typhoid fever — so many ounces to
each patient, with no hospitals, no dieting, no medicine, and
no nursing. It is not, therefore, strange that the Chinese are
not in practical ways more benevolent, but rather that, with
the total lack of system, of prevision, and of supervision, be-
nevolence continues at all. We are familiar with the phenom-
enon of the effect, upon the most cultivated persons, of con-
stant contact with misery which they have no power either to
hinder or to help, for this is illustrated in every modern war.
The first sight of blood causes a sinking of the epigastric nerves,
and makes an indeUble impression ; but this soon wears away,
and is succeeded by a comparative callousness, which, even
to him who experiences it, is a perpetual surprise. In China
there is always a social war, and every one is too accustomed
to its sickening effects to give them more than a momentary
attention.
One of the manifestations of Chinese lack of sympathy is
their attitude towards those who are in any way physically de-
formed. According to the popular belief, the lame, the blind,
especially those who are blind of but one eye, the deaf, the
bald, the cross-eyed, are all persons to be avoided. It appears
to be the assumption that since the physical nature is defective,
the moral native must be so likewise. So far as oiu" obser-
vation extends, such persons are not treated with cruelty, but
they excite very little of that sympathy which in Western lands
is so freely and so spontaneously extended. They are looked
upon as having been overtaken by a punishment for some
secret sin, a theory exactly accordant with that of the ancient
Jews.
The person who is so unfortunate as to be branded with
some natural defect or some acquired blemish will not go long
The absence of sympathy 19?
without being reminded of the fact. One of the mildest forms
of this practice is that in which the peculiarity is employed as
a description in such a way as to attract to it public attention.
" Great elder brother with the pockmarks," says an attendant
in a dispensary to a patient, " from what village do you come? "
It will not be singular if the man whose eyes are afflicted with
strabismus hears an observation to the effect that "when the
eyes look asquint, the heart is askew " ; or if the man who has
no hair is reminded that " out of ten bald men, nine are de-
ceitful, and the other would be so also, were he not dumb."
Such freaks of nature as albinos form an unceasing butt for a
species of cheap wit, which appears never for an instant to be
intermitted. The unfortunate possessor of peculiarities like
this must resign himself (or herself) to a lifetime of this treat-
ment, and happy will he be if his temperament admits of his
listening to such talk in perpetual reiteration without becoming
by turns furious and sullen.
The same excess of frankness is displayed towards those who
exhibit any mental defects. " This boy," remarks a bystander,
" is idiotic." The lad is probably not at all " idiotic," but his
undeveloped mind may easily become blighted by the con-
stant repetition in his presence of the proposition that he has
no mind at all. This is the universal method of treating all
patients afflicted with nervous diseases, or indeed with any
other. All their peculiarities, the details of their behaviour,
the method in which the disease is supposed to have originated,
the symptoms which attend its exacerbations, are all public
property, and are all detailed in the presence of the patient,
who must be thoroughly accustomed to hearing himself de-
scribed as " crazy," " half-witted," " besotted in his intellect,"
etc., etc.
Among a people to whom the birth of male children is so
vital a matter, it is not surprising that the fact of childlessness
is a constant occasion of reproach and taunts, just as in the
igS CHINESE CHylR/tCTERISTlCS
ancient days, when it was said of the mother of the prophet
Samuel that "her adversary also provoked her sore, for to
make her fret." If it is supposed for any reason, or without
reason, that a mother has quietly smothered one of her children,
it will not be strange if the announcement of the same is pub-
licly made to a stranger.
One of the most characteristic methods in which the Chinese
lack of sympathy is manifested is in the treatment which brides
receive on their wedding-day. They are often very young, are
always timid, and are naturally terror-stricken at being sud-
denly thrust among strangers. Customs vary widely, but there
seems to be a general indifference to the feelings of the poor
child thus exposed to the public gaze. In some places it is
allowable for any one who chooses to tmn back the curtains
of the chair and stare at her. In other regions, the unmarried
girls find it a source of keen enjoyment to post themselves at
a convenient position as the bride passes, to throw upon her
handfuls of hay-seed or chaff, which will obstinately adhere
to her carefully oiled hair for a long time. Upon her emerg-
ence from the chair at the house of her new parents, she is
subjected to the same kind of criticism as a newly bought
horse, with what feelings on her part it is not difficult to
imagine.
Side by side with the punctilious ceremony which is so
dear to the Chinese heart is the apparent inability to perceive
that some things must be disagreeable to other persons, and
should for that reason be avoided. A Chinese friend, who
had not the smallest idea of saying what would be deficient
in politeness, remarked to the writer that when he first saw
foreigners it seemed most extraordinary that they should have
beards that reached all round their faces Just like those of
monkeys, but he added, reassuringly, " I am quite used to it
now ! " The teacher who is asked in the presence of his
pupils as to their capacity, replies before them all that the one
THE ABSENCE OF SYMPATHY 199
nearest the door is much the brightest, and will be a graduate
by the time he is twenty years of age, but the two at the next
table are certainly the stupidest children he ever saw. That
such observations have any reflex effect upon the pupils, never
for a moment enters into the thought of any one.
The whole family life of the Chinese illustrates their lack
of sympathy. While there are great differences in different J) i A;,
households, and while from the nature of the case generahsa-
tion is precarious, it is easy to see that most Chinese homes
which are seen at all are by no means happy homes. It is
impossible that they should be so, for they are deficient in
that unity of feeling which to us seems so essential to real
home life. A Chinese family is generally an association of
individuals who are indissolubly tied together, having many
of their interests the same, and many of them very different.
The result is not our idea of a home, and it is not sympathy.
Daughters in China are from the beginning of their existence
more or less unwelcome. This fact has a most important
bearing on their whole subsequent career, and furnishes many
significant illustrations of the absence of sympathy.
Mothers and daughters who pass their days in the nar-
row confinement of a Chinese court under the conditions of
Chinese life, are not likely to lack topics of disagreement, in
which abusive language is indulged in with a freedom which
the unconstraint of everyday hfe tends to promote. It is a
popular saying, full of significance to those who know Chi-
nese homes, that a mother cannot by reviling her own daughter
make her cease to be her own daughter! When a daughter
is once married she is regarded as having no more relations
with her family than those which are inseparable from com-
munity of origin. There is a deep-seated reason for omitting
daughters from all family registers. She is no longer our
daughter, but the daughter-in-law of some one else. Human
natiure will assert itself in requiring visits to the mother's
200 CHINESE CHyiR^CTERISTICS
home, at more or less frequent intervals, according to the
local usage. In some districts these visits are very numerous
and very prolonged, while in others the custom seems to be
to make them as few as possible, and liable to almost com-
plete suspension for long periods in case of a death in the
family. But whatever the details of usage, the principle holds
good that the daughter-in-law belongs to the family of which
she has become a part. When she goes to her mother's home,
she goes on a strictly business basis. She takes with her it
may be a quantity of sewing for her husband's family, which
the wife's family must help her get through with. She is ac-
companied on each of these visits by as many of her children
as possible, both to have her take care of them and to have
them out of the way when she is not at hand to look after
them, and most especially to have them fed at the expense of
the family of the maternal grandmother for as long a time as
possible. In regions where visits of this sort are frequent, and
where there are many daughters in a family, their constant
raids on the old home are a source of perpetual terror to the
whole family, and a serious tax on the common resources.
For this reason these visits are often discouraged by the
fathers and the brothers, while secredy favoured by the
mothers. But as local custom fixes for them certain epochs,
such as a definite date after the New- Year, special feast-days,
etc., the visits cannot be interdicted.
When the daughter-in-law retiuns to her mother-in-law, it
is true of her, as the adage says of a thief, that she never
comes back empty-handed. She must take a present of some
sort for her mother-in-law, generally food. Neglect of this
established rite, or inability to comply with it, will soon result
in dramatic scenes. If the daughter is married into a family
which is poor, or which has become so, and if she has brothers
who are married, she will find that her visits to her mother
are, in the language of the physicians, "contra-indicated.'*
THE ABSENCE OF SYMPATHY 2oi
There is war between the daughters-in-law of a family and the
married sisters of the same family, like that between the Phi-
listines and the children of Israel, each regarding the territory
as pecuharly its own, and the other party as interlopers. If
the daughters-in-law are strong enough to do so, they will,
Uke the Philistines, levy a tax upon the enemy whom they
cannot altogether exterminate or drive out. A daughter-in-law
is regarded as a servant for the whole family, which is pre-
cisely her position, and in getting a servant it is obviously de-
sirable to get one who is strong and well grown, and who has
already been taught the domestic accomplishments of cook-
ing, sewing, and whatever industries may be the means of
livelihood in that particular region, rather than a cliild who
has little strength or capacity. Thus we have known of a
case where a buxom young woman of twenty was married to
a slip of a boy literally only half her age, and in the early
years of their wedded hfe she had the pleasure of ntusing him
through the smallpox, which is considered as a disease of in-
fancy.
The woes of daughters-in-law in China should form the
subject rather for a chapter than for a brief paragraph. When
it is remembered that all Chinese women marry, and gener-
ally marry young, being for a considerable part ofr their lives
under the absolute control of a mother-in-law, some faint con-
ception may be gained of the intolerable miseries of those
daughters-in-law who live in families where they are abused.
Parents can do absolutely nothing to protect their married
daughters, other than remonstrating with the families into
which they have married, and exacting an expensive funeral
if the daughters should be actually driven to suicide. If a
husband should seriously injure or even kill his wife, he might
escape all legal consequences by representing that she was
" unfilial " to his parents. Suicides of young wives are, we
must repeat, excessively frequent, and in some regions scarcely
202 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
a group of villages can be found where they have not recently
taken place. What can be more pitiful than a mother's re-
proaches to a married daughter who has attempted suicide and
been rescued : " Why didn't you die when you had a chance? "
The Governor of Honan, in a memorial published in the
Peking Gazette a few years ago, showed incidentally that while
there is responsibility in the eye of the law for the murder of
a child by a parent, this is rendered nugatory by the provision
that even if a married woman should wilfully and maliciously
murder her young daughter-in-law, the murderess may ransom
herself by a money payment. The case reported was that in
which a woman had burned the girl who was reared to become
her son's wife with incense sticks, then roasted her cheeks with
red-hot pincers, and finally boiled her to death with kettlefuls
of scalding water. Other similar instances are referred to in
the same memorial, the source of which places its authenticity
beyond doubt. Such extreme barbarities are probably rare,
but the cases of cruel treatment which are so aggravated as to
lead to suicide, or to an attempt at suicide, are so frequent as
to excite little more than passing comment. The writer is
personally acquainted with many families in which these oc-
currences have taken place.
The lot of Chinese concubines is one of exceeding bitter-
ness. The homes in which they are to be found — happily
relatively few in number — are the scenes of incessant bicker-
ings and open warfare. " The magistrate of the city in which
I live," writes a resident of China of long experience, " was a
wealthy man, a great scholar, a doctor of literature, an able
administrator, well acquainted with the good teachings of the
Classics; but he would lie and curse and rob, and torture
people to any extent to gratify his evil passions. One of
his concubines ran away ; she was captured, brought back,
stripped, hung up to a beam by her feet, and cruelly and
severely beaten."
THE ABSENCE OF SYMPATHY 203
In a country like China the poor have no time to be sick.
Ailments of women and children are apt to be treated by the
men of the family as of no consequence, and are constantly
allowed to run into incurable maladies, because there was
no time to attend to them, or because the man "could not
afford it."
As we have noticed in speaking of filial piety, it is a con-
stituent part of the theory that the younger are relatively of
little account. They are valued principally for what they may
become, and not for what they are. Thus the practice of
most Western lands is in China reversed. The youngest of
three travellers is proverbially made to take the brunt of all
hardships. The youngest servant is uniformly the common
drudge of the rest. In the grinding poverty of the mass of
the people, it is not strange that the spirit even of a Chinese
boy often rebels against the sharp limitations to which he finds
himself pinned, and that he not infrequently runs away. The
boy who has made up his mind to go will seldom fail to
find some slight thread by which he may attach himself to
some one else. The causes for this behaviour on the part of
boys are various, but so far as we have observed, the harsh
treatment of others is by far the most common. In a case of
this sort, a boy recently recovered from a run of typhus fever,
being possessed by the hearty appetite common to such patients,
and finding the coarse black bread of the family fare hard eat-
ing, went to a local market and indulged in the luxury of ex-
pending cash to the value of about twenty cents. For this he
was severely reproved by his father, upon which the lad ran
away to Manchuria, an unfailing resort of lads all over the
northeastern provinces, and was never heard of again.
It was a saying of George D. Prentice, that man was the
principal object in creation, woman being merely " a side issue."
The phrase is a literal expression of the position of a wife in a
Chinese family. The object had in view in matrimony by the
204 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
family of the girl is to get rid of supporting her. The object
on the part of the husband's family is to propagate that family.
These objects are not in themselves open to criticism, except
on the ground of a too complete occupation of the field of
human motives. But in China no one indulges in any illu-
sions on the subject.
That which is true of the marriages of those in the ordinary
walks of life is pre-eminently true of the poorer classes. It
is a common observation in regard to a widow who has re-
married, that " now she will not starve." It is a popular prov-
erb that a second husband and a second wife are husband
and wife only as long as there is anything to eat ; when the
food-supply fails each shifts for himself. In times of famine
relief cases have often been observed where the husband sim-
ply abandons the wife and the children, leaving them to pick
up a wretched subsistence or to starve. In many instances
daughters-in-law were sent back to their mothers' family to be
supported or starved as the event might be. " She is your
daughter, take care of her yourself." In other cases where
special food was given by distributers of famine relief to
women who were nursing small infants, it was sometimes found
that this allowance had been taken from the women and de-
voured by the men, although these instances were probably
exceptional.
While it would be obviously unfair to judge a people only
by the phenomena of such years as those of great famine, there
is an important sense in which such occasions are a species of
touchstone by which the underlying principles of social life
may be ascertained with more accuracy and certainty than
on ordinary occasions. The sale of wives and of children in
China is a practice not confined to years of peculiar distress,
but during those years it is carried on to an extent which
throws all ordinary transactions of this nature into insignif-
icance. It is perfectly well known to those acquainted with
THE ABSENCE OF SYMPATHY 205
the facts, that during several recent years in many districts
stricken with famine, the sale of women and children was con-
ducted as openly as that of mules and donkeys, the only es-
sential difference being that the former were not driven to
market. During the great famine of 1878, which extended
over nearly all parts of the three most northern provinces, as
well as further south, so extensive a traffic sprung up in women
and girls who were exported to the central provinces that in
some places it was difficult to hire a cart, as they had all been
engaged in the transportation of the newly purchased females
to the regions where they were to be disposed of. In these
cases young women were taken from a region where they were
in a condition of starvation, and where the population was too
redundant, to a region which had been depopulated by rebels,
and where for many years wives had been hard to procure.
It is one of the most melancholy features of this strange state
of affairs, that the enforced sales of members of Chinese fami-
lies to distant provinces was probably the best thing for all
parties, and perhaps the only way in which the hves, both of
those who were sold as well as the lives of those who sold them,
could be preserved.
We have referred to the common neglect of sickness in the
family because the victims are " only women and children."
Smallpox, which in Western lands we regard as a terrible
scourge, is so constant a visitor in China that the people never
expect to be free from its ravages. But it is not much thought
of, because its victims are mainly children! It is exceedingly
common to meet with persons who have lost the sight of both
eyes in consequence of this disease. The comparative disre-
gard of the value of infant life is displayed in ways which we
should by no means have expected from the Chinese, who ob-
ject so strongly to the mutilation of the human body. Young
children are often either not buried at all, an ordinary ex-
pression for their death being the phrase " thrown out," or if
2o6 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
rolled in a mat, they are so loosely covered that they soon fall a
prey to dogs. In some places the horrible custom prevails of
crushing the body of a deceased infant into an indistinguish-
able mass, in order to prevent the " devil " which inhabited it
from returning to vex the family!
While the Chinese are so indifferent to smallpox, our fear
of which they fail to appreciate, they have a similar dread of
typhus and typhoid fevers, which are regarded much as we
regard the scarlet fever. It is very difficult to get proper at-
tention, or any attention at all, if one happens to be taken
with either of these diseases when away from home. To all
appeals for help it is a conclusive reply, " That disease is con-
tagious." While this is true to some extent of many fevers, it
is perhaps most conspicuous in a terrible scourge found in
some of the valleys of Yunnan, and described by Mr. Baber : *
" The sufferer is soon seized with extreme weakness, followed
in a few hours by agonising aches in every part of the body ;
delirium shortly ensues, and in nine cases out of ten the result
is fatal." According to the native accounts: "All parts of
the sick-room are occupied by devils; even the tables and
mattresses writhe about and utter voices, and offer intelligible
replies to all who question them. Few, however, venture into
the chamber. The missionary assured me that the patient is,
in most cases, deserted hke a leper, for fear of contagion. If
an elder member of the family is attacked, the best attention
he receives is to be placed in a solitary room with a vessel of
water by his side. The door is secured, and a pole laid near
it, with which twice a day the anxious relatives, cautiously
peering in, poke and prod the sick person to discover if he re-
tains any symptoms of life."
Among a people of so mild a disposition as the Chinese
there must be a great deal of domestic kindness of which
nothing is seen or heard. Sickness and trouble are peculiarly
♦ " Travels and Researches in Western China."
THE ABSENCE OF SYMPATHY 207
adapted to call out the best side of human nature, and in a
foreign hospital for Chinese we have witnessed many instances
of devotion not merely on the part of parents towards children,
or children towards parents, but of wives towards husbands
and also of husbands towards wives. The same thing is even
more common among strangers towards one another. Many a
Chinese mother nursing an infant will give of her overflowing
abundance to a motherless child which else might starve.
Unwillingness to give help to others, unless there is some
special reason for doing so, is a trait that runs through Chinese
social relations in multifold manifestations. It is a common
and in many cases a perfectly valid excuse which is made when
a bright boy is advised to try to learn to read a little, although
he has no opportunity to go to school, that no one will tell him
the characters, although there may be plenty of reading men
within reach who have abundant leisure. The very mention
of such an ambition is certain to excite unmeasiured ridicule
on the part of those who have had the longest experience of
Chinese schools, as if they were saying : " By what right does
this fellow think to take a short cut, and pick up in a few
months what cost us years of toil, and then was forgotten in
half the time which we took to get it? Let him hire a teacher
for himself as we did." It is very rare indeed to meet with a
genuine case of one who has anything which can be called a
knowledge of characters, even of the most elementary descrip-
tion, which he has " picked up " for himself, though such cases
do occasionally occiu".
The general omission to do anything for the relief of the
drowning strikes every foreigner in China. A few years ago
a foreign steamship was burned in the Yang-tze River, and
the crowds of Chinese who gathered to witness the event did
little or nothing to rescue the passengers and crew. As fast
as they made their way to the shore many of them were robbed
even of the clothing which they had on, and some were mur-
2o8 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
dered outright. Yet it should be remarked in connection with
such atrocities as this, that it is not so very long ago that
wrecking was a profession in England. On the other hand, in
the autumn of 1892 a large British steamer went ashore on the
China coast, and both the local fishermen and the officials did
everything in their power to rescue and relieve the -survivors.
It remains true, however, that there is in China a general cal-
lousness to the many cases of distress which are to be seen
almost everywhere, especially along hnes of travel. It is a
common proverb that to be poor at home is not to be counted
as poverty, but to be poor when on the high-road, away from
home, will cost a man his life.
It is in travelling in China that the absence of helpful kind-
ness on the part of the people towards strangers is perhaps
most conspicuous. When the summer rains have made all
land travel almost impossible, he whose circumstances make
travel a necessity will find that " heaven, earth, and man " are
a threefold harmony in combination against him. No one
will inform him that the road which he has taken will pres-
ently end in a quagmire. If you choose to drive into a
morass, it is no business of the contiguous tax-payers. We
have spoken of the neglect of Chinese highways. When the
traveller has been plunged into one of the sloughs with which
all such roads at certain seasons abound, and finds it impossi-
ble to extricate himself, a great crowd of persons will rapidly
gather from somewhere, " their hands in their sleeves, and idly
gazing," as the saying goes. It is not until a definite bargain
has been made with them that any one of these bystanders,
no matter how numerous, will lift a finger to help one in any
particular. Not only so, but it is a constant practice on such
occasions for the local rustics to dig deep pits in difficult
places, with the express purpose of trapping the traveller, that
he may be obliged to employ these same rustics to help the
traveller out! When there is any doubt as to the road in
THE ABSENCE OF SYMPATHY 209
such places, one might as well plunge forward, disregarding
the cautions of those native to the spot, since one can never
be sure that the directions given are not designed to hinder
rather than help.
We have heard of one instance in which a foreign family,
moving into an interior city of China, was welcomed with
apparent cordiality by the people, the neighbours even volun-
teering to lend them articles for housekeeping until such time
as they might be able to procure an outfit of their own. Other
examples there doubtless are, but it is well known that these
are wholly exceptional. By far the most usual reception is
total indifference on the part of the people, except so far as
curiosity is excited to see what the new-comers are like ; a
spirit of cupidity to make the most of the fat geese whom fate
has sent thither to be plucked ; and sullen hostihty. In the
case of foreigners who may have been reduced to distress,
we have never heard of any assistance volimtarily given by
Chinese, though of course there may have been such cases.
We have known of instances in which sailors have attempted
the journey overland from Tientsin to Chefoo, and from Can-
ton to Swatow, and dming the whole time of their travel they
were never once given a lodging or a mouthful of food.
It is often difficult, and frequently impossible, for those
who are taking a dead body home to secure admission to an
inn. We have known a case of tliis sort where the brother
of the deceased was obliged to stand guard all night in the
street, because the landlord would not allow the coffin to come
within the gate. An extortionate price is exacted for ferrying
a corpse over a river, and we have been cognisant of several
instances in which a dead body has been doubled up into a
parcel and tied with mat wrappings, to make it appear like
merchandise, to avoid suspicion. It was reported during a
recent severe winter in Shantung, that the keeper of an inn in
the city of Wei Hsien refused to allow several travellers who
210 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
were half dead with cold to enter his inn, lest they should die
there, but turned them into the street, where they all froze to
death !
There are some crimes committed in China for which the
perpetrators are often not prosecuted before a magistrate,
partly on account of the difficulty and expense of securing a
conviction, and partly because of the shame of publicity.
Many cases of adultery are thus dealt with by the law of
private revenge. The offender is attacked by a large band
of men, on the familiar Chinese principle that "where there
are many persons, their prestige is great." Sometimes the
man's legs are broken, sometimes his arms, and very often his
eyes are destroyed by rubbing into them quicklime. The
writer has known several instances of this sort, and they are
certainly not uncommon. A very intelligent Chinese, himself
not unfamiliar with Occidental ways of thought, upon hear-
ing a foreigner remonstrate against this practice as a refine-
ment of cruelty, expressed unfeigned surprise, and remarked
that in China such a mode of deaUng with a criminal is
thought to be " extremely mild," as he is thus merely maimed
for life, when he really ought to be killed !
"What do you keep coming here to eat for? " said a sister-
in-law to her husband's brother, who had been away for
several years, and having got into trouble had had his eyes
rubbed out with quicklime. " We have no place for you. If
you want something hard, here is a knife ; and if you want
something soft, there is a rope ; so get along with you." This
conversation was mentioned incidentally by an incurably blind
man, as an explanation of his desire to get a little sight if that
were possible, but if not, he intimated that either the " hard "
or the "soft" could be made to adjust his difficulties. It is
rare to hear of any instances in which the victim of such out-
rages succeeds in getting a complaint heard before a mag-
istrate. The evidence against him would be overwhelming,
THE /iBSENCE OF SYMPATHY aH
and nine officials out of ten would probably consider that the
man who had been thus dealt with deserved it all, and more.
Even if the man were to win his case, he would be no better
off than before, but rather the worse, as the irritation of his
neighbours would only be increased, and his life would not
be safe.
It must be understood that despite the sacredness of human
life in China, there are circumstances in which it is worth very
little. One of the crimes which are most exasperating to the
Chinese is theft. In a crowded population always on the
edge of ruin, this is regarded as a menace to society only less
serious than murder. In a time of famine relief one of the
distributers found an insane woman, who had become a klep-
tomaniac, chained to a huge mill-stone as if she were a mad
dog. If a person becomes known as a thief or in other wa5rs
is a public nuisance, he is in danger of being made away with
by a summary process, not differing essentially from the vigi-
lance committees of the early days of California. Sometimes
this is done by stabbing, but the method most frequently
adopted is burying alive. Doubtless there are those who sup-
pose this expression to be a mere figiu"e of speech, as when
(according to some) one is said " to swallow gold." It is, on
the contrary, a very serious reahty. The writer is acquainted
with four persons who were threatened with death in this form.
In two instances they were bound as a preHminary, and in one
case the pit was actually dug, and in all cases the biuial was
only prevented by the intervention of some older member of
the attacking party. In another instance, occurring in a vil-
lage where the writer is well acquainted, a young man who
was known to be insane was an incorrigible thief. A party of
the villagers belonging to his own family only " consulted " ( ! )
with his mother, and as the result of their deliberations he was
bound, a hole made in the ice covering the river flowing near
the village, and the youth was dropped in.
212 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
During the years in which the refluent waves of the great
T'ai-p'ing rebeUion overspread so large a part of China, the
excitement was everywhere intense. At such times a stranger
had but to be suspected to be seized, and subjected to a rig-
orous examination. If he could give no account of himself
which was satisfactory to his captors, it went hard with him.
Within a few hundred yards of the spot at which these lines
are written two such tragedies occurred, little more than
twenty years ago. The magistrates found themselves almost
powerless to enforce the laws, and issued semi-official notifi-
cations to the people to seize all suspicious characters. The
villagers saw a man coming on a horse, who looked as if he
were a native of another province, and who failed to give ade-
quate explanations of his antecedents. His bedding being
found to be full of articles of jewellery, which he had evidently
plundered from somewhere, the man was tied up, a pit was
dug, and the victim tumbled into it. While this was going
on another was seen racing across the fields in a terrified
manner, and it needed but the suggestion of some bystander
that he was probably an accompUce, to secure for the second
victim the same fate as the first. In some cases the strangers
were compelled to dig their own graves. Any native of the
provinces of China principally affected by the lawlessness of
those lawless times, old enough to recollect the circumstances,
will testify that instances of this sort were too numerous to be
remembered or counted. In the epoch of terror caused by a
mysterious cutting off of cues, in the year 1877, an intense
panic seemed to pervade a large part of the Empire, and there
can be no doubt that many persons who were suspected were
made away with in this manner. Such periods of panic, how-
ever, under certain conditions, are common to all races, and
must not be laid to the charge of the Chinese as a unique
phenomenon.
One of the most striking of all the many exhibitions of the
THE yiBSENCE OF SYMPATHY 213
Chinese lack of sympathy is to be found in their cruelty. It
is popularly believed by the Chinese that the Mohammedans
in China are more cruel than the Chinese themselves. How-
ever this may be, there can be no doubt in the mind of any
one who knows the Chinese that they display an indifference
to the sufferings of others which is probably not to be matched
in any other civilised country. Though children at home are
almost wholly ungoverned, yet the moment their career of edu-
cation is begun the reign of mildness ceases. The " Trimetri-
cal Classic," the most general of the minor text-books of the
Empire, contains a line to the effect that to teach without
severity is a fault in a teacher. While this motto is very
variously acted upon, according to the temperament of the
pedagogue and the obtuseness of his pupils, great harshness
is certainly common. We have seen a scholar fresh from a
preceptor who was struggling to induct his pupils into the
mysteries of examination essays, when the former presented
the appearance of having been through a street fight, his head
covered with wounds and streaming with blood. It is not
rare that pupils are thrown into fits from the abuse which
they receive from angry teachers. On the other hand, it is
not unusual for mothers whose children are so unfortunate as
to be subject to fits, to beat them in those paroxysms, as an
expression of the extreme disgust which such inconvenient
attacks excite. It is not difficult to perceive that mothers
who can beat children because they fall into convulsions will
treat any of their children with cruelty when irritated by
special provocation.
Another example of " absence of sympathy " on the part of
the Chinese is their system of punishments. It is not easy,
from an examination of the legal code of the Empire, to as-
certain what is and what is not in accordance with law, for
custom seems to have sanctioned many deviations from the
letter of the statutes. One of the most significant of these is
*->
1'
214 CHINESB CHARACTERISTICS
the enormous number of blows with the bamboo which are
constantly resorted to, often ten times the number named in
the law, and sometimes one hundred times as many. We
have no space even to mention the dreadful tortures which
are inflicted upon Chinese prisoners in the name of justice.
They may be found enumerated in any good work on China,
such as " The Middle Kingdom," or " Hue's Travels." The
latter author mentions seeing prisoners on the way to the
yam^n, with their hands nailed to the cart in which they were
conveyed, because the constables had forgotten to bring fet-
ters. Nothing so illustrates the proposition that though the
Chinese have " bowels," they certainly have no " mercies," as
the deliberate, routine cruelty with which all Chinese prisoners
are treated who cannot pay for their exemption. A few years
ago the press of Shanghai chronicled the infliction upon two
old prisoners in the yam^n of the District Magistrate of that
city of a sentence for levying blackmail on a new prisoner.
They received between two thousand and three thousand
blows with the bamboo, and had their ankles broken with an
iron hammer. Is it strange that the Chinese adage advises
the dead to keep out of hell and the living to keep out of
yam^ns ? *
Since the preceding paragraphs were written an unexpected
confirmation of some of the statements made has appeared
* A Chinese who is practising law in the United States, Mr. Hang
Yen-chang, in an article on the administration of the law in China, pub-
lished in a leading religious journal, quotes what has been hereinbefore
said of the Chinese " absence of nerves," remarking that the punish-
ments of the Chinese are not regarded by themselves as cruel. While
we are unable to agree with this view, it must not be forgotten that the
Chinese being what they are, their laws and their customs being as they
are, it would probably be wholly impracticable to introduce any essential
amelioration of their punishments without a thoroughgoing reformation
of the Chinese people as individuals. Physical force cannot safely be
abandoned until some moral force is at hand adequate to take its place.
Th£ absence Of sympathy 215
from a most unimpeachable soiirce. The following is an
extract from a translation of the Peking Gazette of February
7, 1888:
" The Governor of Yunnan states that in some of the coun-
try districts of that province the villagers have a horrible
custom of burning to death any man caught steaUng com or
fruits in the fields. They at the same time compel the man's
relations to sign a document, giving their consent to what is
done, and then make them light the fire with their own hands,
so as to deter them from lodging a complaint afterwards.
Sometimes the horrible penalty is exacted for the breaking of
a single branch or stalk, or even false accusations are made,
and men put to death out of spite. This terrible practice,
which seems incredible when heard, came into use during the
time of the Yunnan rebeUion ; and the constant efforts of the
authorities have not succeeded in extirpating it since."
Native Chinese newspapers have within a few years con-
tained detailed accounts of an enforced suttee practised in a
district near Foochow. Widows are compelled to strangle
themselves, and their bodies are then burned, after which
ornamental portals are erected to their virtuous memory!
Magistrates have in vain endeavoured to stop this cruel cus-
tom, but their success has been only local and temporary.
China has many needs, among which her leading states-
men place armies, navies, and arsenals. To her foreign well-
wishers it is plain that she needs a currency, railways, and
scientific instruction. But does not a deeper diagnosis of the
conditions of the Empire indicate that one of her profoundest
needs is more human sympathy ? She needs to feel with
childhood that sympathy which for eighteen centuries has
been one of the choicest possessions of races and peoples
which once knew it not. She needs to feel sympathy for
wives and for mothers, a sympathy which eighteen centuries
have done so much to develop and to deepen. She needs to
r-r
2i6 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
feel sympathy for man as man, to learn that quality of mercy
which droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven, twice blest in
blessing him that gives and him that takes — that divine com-
passion which Seneca declared to be " a vice of the mind,"
but which the influence of Christianity has cultivated until it
has become the fairest plant that ever bloomed upon the earth,
the virtue in the exercise of which man most resembles God.
Four Generations.
CHAPTER XXII.
SOCIAL TYPHOONS,
AMONG a population of such unexampled density as in
Jr\. China, where families often of great size are crowded
together in narrow quarters, it is impossible that occasions for
quarrels should not be all-pervasive. " How many are there
in your family?" you inquire of your neighbour. " Between
ten and twenty mouths," he replies. "And do you have
everj'thing in common?" you ask. "Yes," is the most com-
mon reply. Here, then, are fifteen or twenty human beings,
probably representing three, if not four, generations, who live
from the income of the same business or farm, an income
which is all put into a common stock ; and the wants of all
the members of the family are to be met solely from this
common property. The brothers each contribute their time
and strength to the common fund, but the sisters-in-law are
an element of capital importance, and very difficult it is to
harmonise them. The elder sister-in-law enjoys tyrannising
somewhat over the younger, and the younger ones are natu-
rally jealous of the prerogatives of the elder. Each strives to
make her husband feel that in this community of property he
is the one who is worsted.
The younger generation of children furnish a prolific source
of domestic unpleasantness. Where is the society capable of
withstanding the strain to which it must be subjected under
conditions such as these? Troubles of this nature are far from
217
J^^
2i8 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
being uncommon in well-ordered homes in Western lands ; how
much more in the complex and compact life of the Chinese !
The occasions for differences are as numerous as the objects
and interests with which human beings have to do. Money,
food, clothes, children and their squabbles, a dog, a chicken,
anything or nothing, will serve as the first loop on which will
be knit a complicated tangle of quarrel.
One of the most enigmatical characters in the Chinese lan-
guage is that which is used to denote the rise of passion, and
which has been euphemistically translated "wrath-matter."
The word "cA'i" is a most important one in all kinds of
Chinese philosophy and in practical life. CA'i is generated
when a man becomes very angry, and the Chinese believe
that there is some deadly connection between this developed
"wrath-matter" and the human system generally, so that a
violent passion is constantly named as the exciting cause of
all varieties of diseases and ailments, such as blindness, failure
of the heart, etc. One of the first questions which a Chinese
doctor asks his patient is, " What was it that threw you into a
passion? " Foreign physicians in China of wide experience
are ready to believe that Chinese ck'i is capable of producing
all that is claimed for it by the Chinese themselves. Of this
the following case is a striking illustration : A man living in
the mountains in central Shantung had a wife and several
children, two of them of tender age. In October, 1889, the
wife died. This made the husband very angry, not, as he
explained, in answer to a question, because he was specially
attached to his wife, but because he could not see how he was
to manage the small children. In a paroxysm of fury he
seized a Chinese razor, and made three deep cuts in his abdo-
men. Some of his friends afterwards sewed up the wound
with cotton thread. Six days later the man had another acces-
sion of cA'i, and ripped open the wound. On each occasion
he was afterwards unable to remember what he had done.
SOCIAL TYPHOONS «*$
From these fearful injuries he nevertheless recovered, to such
an extent that six months later he was able to walk several
hundred miles to a foreign hospital for treatment. The ab-
dominal wound had partly closed, leaving only a small fistula,
but the normal action of the bowels was interrupted. He is a
striking exemplification of that physical vitality to which atten-
tion has been already directed.
The habit of yelling to enforce command or criticism is in-
grained in the Chinese, and appears to be ineradicable. To
expostulate with another in an ordinary tone of voice, paus-
ing at times to listen to his opponent's reply, is to a Chinese
almost a psychological impossibility. He musf shout, he musf
interrupt, by a necessity as inexorable as that which leads a
dog labouring under great excitement to bark.
The Chinese have carried to a degree of perfection known
only among Orientals the art of reviling. The moment that a
quarrel begins abusive words of this sort are poured forth in a
filthy stream to which nothing in the English language offers
any parallel, and with a virulence and pertinacity suggestive
of the fish-women of Billingsgate. The merest contact is
often sufficient to elicit a torrent of this invective, as a touch
induces the electric spark, and it is in constant and almost
universal use by all classes and both sexes, always and every-
where. It is a common complaint that women use even viler
language than men, and that they continue it longer, justify-
ing the aphorism that what Chinese women have lost in the
compression of their feet seems to have been made up in the
volubility of their tongues. Children just beginning to talk
learn this abusive dialect from their parents and often em-
ploy it towards them, which is regarded as extremely amusing.
The use of this language has become to the Chinese a kind of
second nature. It is confined to no class of society. Literary
graduates and officials of all ranks up to the very highest,
when provoked, employ it as freely as their coolies. It is
2 20 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
even used by common people on the street as a kind of ban-
tering salutation, and as such is returned in kind.
Occidental curses are sometimes not loud but deep, but
Chinese maledictions are nothing if not lowd. An English
oath is a winged bullet ; Chinese abuse is a ball of filth.
Much of this abusive language is regarded as a sort of spell
or curse. A man who has had the heads removed from his
field of millet stands at the entrance of the alley which leads
to his dwelling, and pours forth volleys of abuse upon the
unknown (though often not unsuspected) offender. This
proceeding is regarded as having a double value : first, as a
means of notifying the public of his loss and of his consequent
fury, thus freeing his mind ; and second, as a prophylactic,
tending to secure him against the repetition of the offence.
The culprit is (theoretically) in ambush, hstening with some-
thing like awe to the frightful imprecations levelled at him.
He cannot, of course, be sure that he is not detected, which is
often the case. Perhaps the loser knows perfectly well who
it was who stole his goods, but contents himself with a public
reviling, as a formal notice that the culprit is either known or
suspected, and will do well to avoid the repetition of his act.
If provoked too far the loser will, it is thus tacitly proclaimed,
retaliate. This is the Chinese theory of public reviling. They
frankly admit that it not only does not stop theft, but that
it has no necessary tendency to prevent its repetition, since
among a large population the thief or other offender is by no
means certain to know that he has been reviled.
The practice of " reviling the street " is often indulged in
by women, who mount the flat roof of the house and shriek
away for hoiu-s at a time, or until their voices fail. A respect-
able family would not allow such a performance if they could
prevent it, but in China, as elsewhere, an enraged woman is a
being difficult to restrain. Abuse delivered in this way, on
general principles, attracts little or no attention, and one some-
SOCIAL TYPHOONS 22 1
times comes upon a man at the head of an alley, or a woman
on the roof, screeching themselves red in the face, with not a
single auditor in sight. If the day is a hot one the reviler
bawls as long as he (or she) has breath, then proceeds to re-
fresh himself by a season of fanning, and afterwards returns
to the attack with renewed fury.
If a Chinese quarrel be at all violent, it is next to impossi-
ble that it should be concluded without more or less personal
vilification. English travellers in the south of Europe have
noted the astonishment of the Latin races at the invariable
habit of the inhabitant of the British Isles to strike out from
the shoulder if he gets into a fight. The Chinese,* hke the
Italians, have seldom learned to box, or if they have learned
it is not scientific boxing. The first and chief resource of
Chinese when matters come to extremities is to seize the cue
of their opponent, endeavouring to pull out as much hair as
possible. In nine fights out of ten, where only two parties
are concerned, and where neither party can lay hold of any
weapon, the " fight " resolves itself simply into a hair-pulling
match.
A Chinese quarrel is also a reviling match, low language
and high words. But an infinitesimal fraction of the partici-
pants in Chinese fights is seriously disabled in other respects
than that by incessant bawling they have become hoarse. We
should be surprised to hear that any one ever saw a Chinese
crowd egg on combatants. What we have seen, what we al-
«(ravs expect to see. is the instant and spontaneous appearance
on the scene of the peace-maker. He is double, perhaps
quadruple. Each of the peace-makers seizes a roaring bellig-
erent, and tranquillises him with good advice. As soon as he
finds himself safely in charge of the peace-maker, the principal
in the fight becomes doubly furious. He has judiciously post-
poned losing control of himself until there is some one else
ready to take that control, and then he gives way to spasms of
222 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
apparent fury, unquestionably innocuous both to himself and
to others. In his most furious moments a Chinese is ame-
nable to " reason," for which he has not only a theoretical, but
a very practical, respect. Who ever saw a belligerent turn
and rend the officious peace-maker, who is holding him from
flying at his foe ? This is the crucial point in the struggle.
Even in his fury the Chinese recognises the desirableness of
peace — in the abstract — only he thinks that in his concrete
case peace is inapphcable. The peace-maker judges differ-
ently, and nearly always drags away the bellicose reviler, who
yells back to his opponent malignant defiance as he goes.
T It is a curious feature of the universal Chinese practice of
reviling that it is not considered " good form " in hurling this
abuse at another to touch upon his actual faults, but rather to
impute to him the most ignoble origin, and to heap contempt
upon his ancestors. The employment of this language towards
another is justly regarded as a great indignity and a grave
offence, but the point of the insult consists not in the use of
such language in the presence of another, nor even principally
in its application to him, but in the loss of " face " which this
application of such terms implies. The proper apology for
the commission of this offence is not that the person who has
been guilty of it has demeaned himself, and has done a dis-
graceful act, but that he was wrong in applying those terms to
that person at that time.
It is fortunate for the Chinese that they have not the habit
of carrying weapons about them, for if they had revolvers or
swords, like the former samurai class of Japan, it would not
be possible to predict the amount of mischief which the daily
evolution of chH would produce.
When any Chinese is once seized of the idea that he
has been deeply wronged, there is no power on earth which
can prevent the sudden and often utterly ungovernable de-
velopment of a certain amount of ch'i, or rather of a very un-
SOCIAL TYPHOONS ««3
certain amount of it. We have heard of a man who applied
for baptism to an old and experienced missionary and was
very properly refused, whereupon he got a knife and threatened
to attack the missionary to prove by ordeal of battle the claim
to the rite of initiation. Happily this method of taking the
kingdom of heaven by violence does not commend itself to
most novitiates, but the underlying principle is one that is
constantly acted upon in all varieties of Chinese social life.
An old woman who will not take " no " for an answer asks for
iinancial assistance, and throws herself on the groimd in front
of your carter's mules. If she is run over so much the better
for her, for she is thus reasonably sure of a support for an in-
definite period. An old vixen living in the same village as the
writer was constantly threatening to commit suicide, but though
•ill her neighbours were willing to lend their aid, she never
seemed to accomplish her purpose. At last she threw herself
into one of the village mudholes with intent to drown, but
found to her disgust that the water was only up to her neck.
She lacked that versatility of invention which would have en-
abled her to put her head under water and hold it there, but
contented herself with reviling the whole village at the top of
her voice for her contretemps. The next time she was more
successful.
If a wrong has been committed for which there is no legal
redress, such as abuse of a married daughter beyond the point
which custom warrants, a party of the injured friends will visit
the house of the mother-in-law, and if they are resisted, will
engage in a pitched battle. If they are not resisted, and the
offending persons have fled, the assailants will proceed to
smash all the crockery in the house, the mirrors, the water-jars,
and whatever else is frangible, and having thus allowed their
ch'i to escape, they depart. If their coming is known in ad-
vance, the very first step is to remove all these articles to the
house of some neighbour. One of the Chinese newspapers
2 24 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
mentioned a case which occurred in Peking, where a man had
arranged for a wedding with a beautiful woman, who turned
out to be ugly, bald-headed, and elderly. The disappointed
bridegroom became greatly enraged, struck the go-betweens,
reviled the whole company, and smashed the bride's wedding-
outfit. Any Chinese would have acted in the same way, if he
was in such relations to his environment that he dared to do
so.* It is after the preliminary paroxysms of ch'i have had
opportunity to subside, that the work of the " peace-talker "
— that useful factor in Chinese social life — is accomplished.
Sometimes these most essential individuals are so deeply im-
pressed with the necessity of peace, that even when the matter
is not one which concerns them personally, they are willing to
go from one to the other making prostrations now to this side
and now to that, in the interests of harmony.
Whenever social storms prove incapable of adjustment by
the ordinary processes — in other words, when there is such a
preponderance of ch'i that it cannot be dispersed without an
explosion — there is the beginning of the lawsuit, a term in
China of fateful significance. The same blind rage which
leads a person to lose all control of himself in a quarrel leads
him, after the first stages of the outbreak have passed, to de-
termine to take the offender before a magistrate, in order " to
have the law on him." This proceeding in Western lands is
generally injudicious, but in China it is sheer madness. There
is sound sense in the proverb which praises the man who will
suffer himself to be imposed upon to the death before he will
• It was reported in Peking that the present Emperor was not pleased
with the choice of a wife which was made for him. lie had been so often
crossed in his wishes by the Empress Dowager that any selection which
was made by her would have been distasteful. It was also whispered
that scenes occurred in the palace not remotely unlike those mentioned as
taking place at the wedding of one of his subjects. " When those above
act, those below will imitate."
^"^ -fr
SOCIAL TYPHOONS 225
go to the law, which will often be worse than death. We
smile at the fury of the immigrant whose dog had been shot
by a neighbour, and who was remonstrated with by a friend
when the resolution to go to law was declared. " What was
the value of the dog? " " Ze dog vas vort nottings, but since
he vas so mean as to kill him, he shall pay ze full value of
him." In an Occidental land such a suit would be dismissed
with costs, and there it would end. In China it might go on
to the ruin of both parties, and be a cause of feud for gen-
erations yet to come. But generally speaking, every Chinese
lawsuit calls out upon each side the omnipresent peace-talker, |] ^.v^
whose services are invaluable. Millions of lawsuits are thus'i v^^
strangled before they reach the fatal stage. In a village num-
bering a thousand families, the writer was informed that for
more than a generation there had not been a single lawsuit,
owing to the restraining influence of a leading man who had
a position in the yamen of the District Magistrate.
A social machinery so complicated as that of China must
often creak, and sometimes under extreme pressure bend, yet it
seldom actually breaks beneath the strain, for, like the human
body, the Chinese body politic is provided, as we see, with little
sacs of lubricating fluid, distilled, a drop at a time, exactly , ,
when and where they are most needed. It is the peaceable fiJ-^^
quality of the Chinese which makes him a valuable social unit.i >. \ ^^
He loves order and respects law, even when it is not in itself -^-^^^
respectable. Of all Asiatic peoples, the Chinese are probably
most easily governed, when governed on lines to which they
are accustomed. Doubtless there are other forms of civil-
isation which are in many or in most respects superior to
that of China, but perhaps there are few which would sustain ,, ,
the tension to which Chinese society has for ages been sub- . . ' a
ject, and it may be that there is none better entitled to claim ' -^ ' ^
the benediction once pronounced upon the peace-makers.
,r
CHAPTER XXIII.
MUTUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND RESPECT FOR LAW.
ONE of the most distinctive features of Chinese society is
that which is epitomised in the word " responsibihty,"
a word which carries with it a significance and embraces a
wealth of meaning to which Western lands are total strangers.
In those lands, as we well know, the individual is the unit and
the nation is a large collection of individuals. In China the
unit of social life is found in the family, the village, or the
clan, and these are often convertible terms. Thousands of
Chinese villages comprise exclusively persons having the same
surname and the same ancestors. The inhabitants have lived
in the same spot ever since they began to live at all, and trace
an unbroken descent for many hundred years back to the last
great political upheaval, such as the overthrow of the Ming
Dynasty or its establishment. In such a village there can be
no relationship laterally more distant than " cousin," and every
male member of an older generation is either a father, an
uncle, or some kind of a "grandfather." Sometimes eleven
generations are represented in the same small hamlet. This
does not imply, as might be supposed, extreme old age on the
part of any representative of the older generations. The
Chinese marry young, marry repeatedly, often late in life, and
constantly adopt children. The result is such a tangle among
relatives that without special inquiry and minute attention to
the particular characters which are employed in writing the
names of all who belong to the same " generation," it is im-
a26
.r^:
MUTUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND RESPECT FOR LAW 227
possible to determine who constitute " the rising generation,"
and who form the generation which rose long ago. An old
man nearly seventy years of age affirms that a young man of
thirty is his " grandfather." All the numerous " cousins " of
the same generation are termed "brothers," and if the per-
plexed foreigner insists upon accuracy, and inquires whether
they are " own brothers," he will not infrequently be enlight-
ened with the reply that they are " own brother-cousins." The
writer once proposed a question of this sort, and after some
little hesitation the person addressed replied, " Why, yes, you
might call them own brothers."
These items are but particulars under the general head of '^^ ^ Au
the social solidarity of the Chinese. It is this solidarity which
forms the substratum upon which rests Chinese responsibility.
The father is responsible for his son, not merely until the latter
attains to " years of discretion," but as long as hfe lasts, and
the son is responsible for his father's debts. The elder brother
has a definite responsibility for the younger brother, and the
" head of the family " — usually the oldest representative of the
oldest generation — has his responsibility for the whole family
or clan. What these responsibilities actually are will depend,
however, upon circumstances.
Customs vary widely, and the " personal equation " is a
most important factor, of which mere theory takes no ac-
coimt. Thus in a large and influential family, embracing
many literary men, some of whom are local magnates and
perhaps graduates, the " head of the clan " may be an addle-
headed old man who can neither read nor write, and who has
never in his hfe been ten miles from home.
The influence of an elder brother over a younger, or indeed
of any older member over a younger member of the same
family, is of the most direct and positive sort, and is entirely
irreconcilable with what we mean by personal liberty. The
younger brother is employed as a servant and would hke to
228 CHINESE CHAR/tCTERISTICS
give up his place, but his elder brother will not let him do so.
The younger brother wishes to buy a winter garment, but his
elder brother thinks the cost is too great, and will not allow
him to incur the expense. Even while these remarks are
committed to paper, a case is reported in which a Chinese has
a number of rare old coins, which a foreigner desires to pur-
chase. Lest the owner should refuse to sell — as is the Chinese
way when one happens to have what another wants — the
middleman who made the discovery proposes to the foreigner
that he should send to the uncle of the owner of the coins a
present of foreign candy and other trifles, by which oblique
means such pressure will be brought to bear upon the owner
of the coins that he will be obliged to give them up!
There is a bvu-lesque tale which relates that a traveller in a
Western land once came upon a very old man with a long
white beard, who was crying bitterly. Struck with the singu-
larity of this spectacle, the stranger halted and asked the old
man what he was crying about, and was surprised to be told
that it was because his father had just whipped him! " Where
is your father ? " " Over there," was the reply. Riding in
the direction named, the traveller found a much older man,
with a beard much longer and whiter than the other. " Is
that yotu son? " asked the traveller. " Yes, it is." " Did you
whip him?" "Yes, I did." "Why?" "Because he was
saucy to his grandfather, and if he does it again I will whip
him some more ! " Translated into the conditions of Chinese
life the burlesque disappears.
I Next in order to the responsibility of members of a family
' for one another comes the mutual responsibility of neighbours
'^'' V-^^ ^^^ neighbours. Whether these " neighbours " are or are not
^/T* _hV related makes no difference in their responsibility, which de-
pends solely upon proximity. This responsibility is based
upon the theory that virtue and vice are contagious. Good
neighbours will make good neighbours, and bad neighbours
\
MUTUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND RESPECT FOR LAW 229
will make others like them. The mother of Mencius removed
three times in order to reach a desirable neighbourhood. To
an Occidental, fresh from the republican ideas which dominate
the Anglo-Saxons, it seems a matter of little or no consequence
who his neighbours are, and if he be a resident of a city he
may occupy a dwelling for a year in ignorance even of the
name of the family next door. But in China it is otherwise.
If a crime takes place the neighbours are held guilty of some-
thing analogous to what English law calls "misprision of
treason," in that when they knew of a criminal intention they
did not report it. It is vain to reply " I did not know." You
are a " neighbour," and therefore you must have known.
The proceedings which are taken when the crime of killing
a parent has been committed, furnish a striking illustration of
the Chinese theory of responsibility. As has been already
mentioned in speaking of fihal piety, in such instances the
criminal is often alleged to be insane, as indeed one must be
who voluntarily subjects himself to death by the shcing process
when he might escape it by suicide. In a memorial published
in the Peking Gazette a few years since, the Governor of one
of the central provinces reported in regard to a case of par-
ricide that he had had the houses of all the neighbours pulled
down, on the ground of their gross derehction of duty in not
exerting a good moral and reformatory influence over the
criminal ! Such a proceeding would probably strike an average
Chinese as eminently reasonable. In some instances when
this crime has occurred in a district, in addition to all the
punishments of persons, the city wall itself is pulled down in
parts, or modified in shape, a round comer substituted for a
square one, or a gate removed to a new situation, or even
closed up altogether. If the crime should be repeated several
times in the same district, it is said that the whole city would
be razed to the ground, and a new one founded elsewhere, but
of this we have met with no certain examples.
J-
230 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
Next above the neighbours comes the village constable or
bailiff, whose functions are of a most miscellaneous nature,
sometimes confined to a single village, and sometimes extend-
ing to many. In either case he is the medium of communi-
cation between the local magistrate and the people, and is
always liable to get into trouble from any one of innumerable
causes, and may be beaten to a jelly by a captious official for
not reporting what he could not possibly have known.
At a vast elevation above the village constables stand the
District Magistrates, who, so far as the people are concerned,
are by far the most important officers in China. As regards
the people below tliem they are tigers. As regards the officials
above them they are mice. A single local magistrate combines
functions which ought to be distributed among at least six
different officers. A man who is at once the civil and the
criminal judge, the sheriff, the coroner, the treasxirer, and the
tax-commissioner for a large and populous district, cannot at-
tend to the details of all his work. This vicious agglomera-
tion of duties in one office renders it both a physical and a
moral impossibility that these duties should be properly dis-
charged. Many magistrates have no interest whatever in the
business which they despatch, except to extract from it all that
it can be made to yield, and, from the nature of their miscel-
laneous and incongruous duties, they are largely dependent
upon their secretaries and other subordinates. Having so
much to do, even with the best intentions these officials can-
not fail to make numerous mistakes, and many things must go
wrong, for which they will be held responsible. The District
Magistrate, like all Chinese officials, is supposed to have an
exhaustive acquaintance with everything within his jurisdiction
which is an object of knowledge, and an unlimited capacity to
prevent what ought to be prevented. To facilitate this knowl-
edge and that of the local constables, each city and village is
divided into compound atoms composed of ten families each.
MUTUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND RESPECT FOR LA IV 23*
At every door hangs a placard or tablet upon which is inscribed
the name of the head of the family, and the number of individ-
uals which it comprises. This system of registration, analogous
to the old Saxon tithings and hundreds, makes it easy to fix
local responsibility. The moment a suspicious stranger ap-
pears in the district comprised in a tithing, he is promptly
reported to the head of the tithing by whoever sees him first.
By the head of the tithing he is immediately reported to the
local constable, and by the local constable to the District
Magistrate, who at once takes steps "rigorously to seize and
severely to punish." By the same simple process all local
crimes, not due to " suspicious-looking strangers " but to per-
manent residents, are instantly detected before they have
hatched into overt acts, and thus the pm"e morals of the
people are preserved from age to age. >
It is evident that such regulations as these can be efficient
only in a state of society where fixity of residence is the rule.
It is also evident that even in China, where the most extreme
form of permanence of abode is found, il:e system of tithing
is to a large extent a mere legal fiction. Sometimes a city,
where no one remembers to have seen them before, suddenly
blossoms out with ten-family tablets on every door-post, which
indicates the arrival of a District Magistrate who intends to
enforce the regulations. In some places these tablets are ob-
servable in the winter season only, for this is the time when
bad characters are most numerous and most dangerous. But
so far as our knowledge extends, the system as such is little
more than a theoretical reminiscence, and even when observed
it is probably merely a form. Practically, it is not generally
observed, and in some provinces at least one may travel for a
thousand miles, and for months together, and not find ten-
family tablets posted in more than one per cent, of the cities
and villages along the route.
It may be mentioned in passing that the Chinese tithing
J-
232 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
system is intimately connected with the so-called census. If
each doorway exhibits an accurate list, constantly corrected,
of the number of persons in each family ; if each local con-
stable has accurate copies of the lists of all the tithings within
his territory; if each District Magistrate has at his disposal
accurate summaries of all these items — it is as easy to secure a
complete and accurate census of the Empire as to do a long
sum in addition, for the whole is equal to the aggregate of all
its parts. But these are large ifs, and, as a matter of fact,
none of the conditions are realised. The tablets are non-
existent, and when the local magistrate is occasionally called
upon for the totals which should represent them, neither he
nor the numerous constables upon whom he is entirely de-
pendent has the least interest in securing accuracy, which
indeed from the nature of the case is difficult. There is no
" squeeze " to be got from a census, and for this reason alone a
. really accurate Chinese census is a mere figment of the imagi-
nation. Even in the most enlightened Western lands the notion
that a census means taxation appears to be ineradicable, but
! in China the suspicion which it excites is so strong, that for
this reason alone, unless the tithing system were carried out
with uniform faithfulness in all places and at all times, an ac-
curate enumeration would be impossible.
For a local magistrate to be guilty of all kinds of misde-
meanours for which he gets into no trouble whatever, or get-
ting into it, escapes scot-free by means of influential friends
or by a judicious expenditure of silver, and yet after all to lose
his post on account of something that happened within his
jurisdiction but which he could not have prevented, is a con-
stant occurrence.
How the system of responsibihty operates in the domain of
all the successive grades of officials, it is unnecessary to illus-
trate in detail. Multiplied examples are found in almost
every copy of the translations from the Peking Gazette. A
MUTUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND RESPECT FOR LAPV 233
case was mentioned a few years ago, where a soldier on guard
had stolen some thirty boxes of bullets placed in his care, and
sold them to a tinner, who supposed them to be condemned
and surplus stores. The soldier was beaten one hundred
blows, and banished to the frontiers of the Empire in penal
sersatude. A petty officer whose duty it was to inspect the
stores was condemned to eighty blows and dismissed from
the service, though allowed to commute his punishment for a
money payment. The purchasers of the material were consid-
ered innocent of any blame, but on general principles were
beaten forty blows of the light bamboo. The lieutenant in
charge was cashiered in order to be put upon trial for his
" connivance " in the theft, but he judiciously disappeared.
The Board to which the memorial was addressed was requested
to determine the penalty to be inflicted upon the general in
command, for his share in the matter. Thus each individual
is a link in the chain which is followed up to the very end,
and no link can escape by pleading ignorance or inability to
prevent the crime.
Still more characteristic examples of Chinese responsibility
are furnished by the memorials annually appearing in the
Peking Gazette, reporting the outbreak of some irrepressible
river. In the case of a flood in the Yung-ting River in the
province of Chihli during the summer of 1888, the waters
came down from the mountains with the velocity of a mill-
race. The officials seem to have been promptly on hand,
and to have risked their lives in struggling to do what was
utterly beyond the powers of man. They were helpless as
ants under a rain-spout during a summer torrent. But this
did not prevent Li Hung-chang from requesting that they
should be immediately stripped of their buttons, or deprived
of their rank without being removed from their posts (a fa-
vourite mode of expressing Imperial dissatisfaction), and the
Governor-General consistently concludes his memorial with
J-
234 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
the usual request that his owii name should be sent to the
Board of Punishmeuls for the determination of a penalty to
be inflicted upon him for his complicity in the affair. Similar
floods have occurred several times since, and upon each occa-
sion a similar memorial has been presented. The Emperor
always instructs the proper Board to "take note." In like
manner the failure of the embankments built a few years ago
to bring back the Yellow River into its old channel was the
signal for the degradation and banishment of a great num-
ber of officers, from the Governor of the province of Honan
downwards.
The theory of responsibility is carried upwards with un-
flinching consistency to the Son of Heaven himself. It is no
unusual thing for the Emperor in published edicts to confess
to Heaven his shortcomings, taking upon himself the blame
.of floods, famines, and revolutionary outbreaks, for which he
begs Heaven's forgiveness. His responsibility to Heaven is
as real as that of his officers to himself. If the Emperor
loses his throne, it is because he has already lost " Heaven's
decree," which is presumptively transferred to whoever can
hold the Empire.
That aspect of the Chinese doctrine of responsibiUty which
is the most repellent to Western standards of thought, is found
in the Oriental practice of extinguishing an entire family for
the crime of one of its members. Many instances of this sort
were reported in connection with the T'aip'ing rebellion, and
more recently the family of the chieftain Yakub Beg, who led
the Mohammedan rebellion in Turkestan, furnished another.
These atrocities are not, however, limited to cases of overt
rebellion.- In the year 1873 "a Chinese was accused and
I convicted of having broken open the grave of a relative of
the Imperial family, in order to rob the coffin of certain gold,
silver, and jade ornaments which had been btuued in it. The
entire family of the criminal, consisting of fovu: generations,
MUTUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND RESPECT FOR LAIV 235
from a man more than ninety years of age to a female infant
only a few months old, was exterminated. Thus eleven per-
sons suffered death for the offence of one. And there was
no evidence to show that any of them were parties to, or were
even aware of, his crime."
The Chinese theory and practice of responsibility has been - - -6
often cited as one of the causes of the perpetuity of Chinese ^
institutions. It forges around every member of Chinese soci- i
ety iron fetters from which it is impossible that he should
break loose. It constantly violates every principle of justice
by punishing all grades of officers, as well as private individ-
uals, for occiurences in which they had no part, and of which,
as in the example just cited, they were not improbably utterly
ignorant. It is the direct cause of dehberate and systematic
falsification in all ranks of officials, from the very lowest to
the very highest. If an officer is responsible for the existence
of crimes which he does not find it easy to control, or of which
he is ignorant till it is too late to prevent them, he will inevi-
tably conceal the facts so as to screen himself. This is what
constantly happens in all departments of the government, to
the complete subversion of justice, for it is not in human na-
ture to give truthful reports of events when, in consequence
of such reports, the person who makes them may be severely
and unjustly punished. The abuse of this principle alone
would suffice to account for a large part of the maladminis-
tration of justice in China, to which our attention is so often
called.
An additional evil connected with the official system has /
been noticed by every writer on China. It is the absence of ^^J-JLf\^
independent salaries for the officers, whose allowances are so :
absurdly small that often they would not pay the expenses of
the yam^n for a day. Besides this, the officials are subject to
so many forfeitures that it is said that they rarely draw their
nominal allowances at all, as it would be necessary to pay
J-
236 CHINESE CHy4R/tCTERJSTICS
them all back again in fines. The absolute necessity for levy-
ing squeezes and taking bribes arises from the fact that there
is no other way by which a magistrate can exist.
Still, while we are impressed with flagrant violations of jus-
tice which the Chinese theory of responsibility involves, it is
impossible to be blind to its excellences.
In Western lands, where every one is supposed to be inno-
cent until he is proved to be guilty, it is exceedingly difficult
to fix responsibility upon any particular person. A bridge
breaks down with a heavy train of cars loaded with passen-
gers, and an investigation fails to find any one in fault. A
lofty building falls and crushes scores of people, and while the
architect is criticised, he shows that he did the best he could
with the means at his disposal, and no one ever hears of his
being punished. If an ironclad capsize, or a military cam-
paign is ruined because the proper preparations were not
made, or not made in time, eloquent speeches set forth the
defects of the system which renders such events possible, but
no one is punished. The Chinese are far behind us in their
conceptions of public justice, but might we not wisely learn
again from them the ancient lesson that every one should be
held rigidly responsible for his own acts, in order to the secu-
rity of the body politic?
The relation of the Chinese theory of responsibility to for-
eigners in China is one of great importance. The "Boy,"
into whose hands everything is committed, and who must
produce every spoon, fork, or curio ; the steward, who takes
general charge of your affairs, suffering no one but himself to
cheat you ; the compradore, who wields vast powers but who
is individually responsible for every piece of property and for
every one of hundreds of coolies — these types of character we
still have with us, and shall always have, as long as we have
anything to do with the Chinese. Innkeepers in China are
not noted for flagrant virtues of any kind, especially for con-
MUTUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND RESPECT FOR LAIV 237
sideration towards foreign travellers. Yet we have known of
a Chinese innkeeper who ran half a mile after a foreigner,
bringing an empty sardine-tin which he supposed to be a for-
gotten valuable. He knew that he was responsible, unlike 1
American hotel-keepers, who coolly notify their guests that)
" the proprietor is not responsible for boots left in the hall to
be blacked."
Responsibility for the character, behaviour, and debts of
those whom they recommend or introduce, is a social obliga-
tion of recognised force, and one which it behoves foreigners
dealing with Chinese to emphasise. The fact that a headman,
whatever his position, is " responsible " for any and every act
of omission or commission of all his subordinates, exerts over
the whole series of links in the chain a peculiar influence,
which has been instinctively appreciated by foreigners in all
the long history of their dealings with Chinese. There is a
tradition of a head compradore in a bank, who in the " more
former days " was called to account because the " Boy " had
allowed a mosquito to insinuate itself within the mosquito-net
of the bank manager! If the Chinese perceive that a for-
eigner is ignorant of the responsibihty of his employes, or dis-
regards it, it will not take them long to act upon this discovery
in extremely disagreeable ways. \
One of the many admirable qualities of the Chinese is their ( iU-^^V'^,
innate respect for law. Whether this element in their charac- ' ' ,'^(.o- -■ y^
ter is the effect of their institutions, or the cause of them, we
do not know. But what we do know is that the Chinese are
by nature and by education a law-abiding people. Reference
has been already made to this trait in speaking of the national
virtue of patience, but it deserves special notice in connec-
tion with Chinese theories of mutual responsibility. In China f f\j-4^*a^r'-'-^
every man, woman, and child is directly responsible to some ',
one else, and of this important fact no one for a moment
loses sight. Though one should " go far and fly high " he
^
93^ CHINESE CH/1RACTERISTICS
cannot escape, and this he well knows. Even if he should
himself escape, his family cannot escape. The certainty of
this does not indeed make a bad man good, but it frequently
prevents him from becoming tenfold worse.
It is an illustration of Chinese respect for law, and all that
appertains thereto, that it often happens that men of literary
rank are so terrified in the presence of a District Magistrate
that they dare not open their mouths unless compelled to do
so, although the case may not in any way concern themselves.
We have indeed known of one instance where a man of this
class appeared to be thrown into a condition resembling epi-
lepsy by sheer fright in giving evidence. He was taken home
in a fit, and soon after died.
Contrast the Chinese inherent respect for law with the
spirit often manifested where republican institutions flourish
most, and manifested, it must be said, by those whose antece-
dents would least lead us to expect it. College laws, munic-
ipal ordinances, state and national enactments, are quietly
defied, as if the assertion of personal liberty were one of the
^greatest needs, instead of one of the principal dangers of the
(itime. It is rightly regarded as one of the most serious indict-
,ments against the transaction of Chinese public business of all
/ kinds, that every one not only connives at acts of dishonesty
/ which it is his duty to prevent and to expose, but that such is
\ the constitution of public and private society that every one
\jnust connive at such acts. But is it less disgraceful that in
Christian countries men of education and refinement, as well
as the uncultivated, quietly ignore or deliberately disregard
the laws of the land as if by common consent, and as if it
were now a well-ascertained fact that a law is more honoured
in the breach than in the observance ? How shall we explain
or defend the existence upon our statute-books of multitu-
dinous laws which are neither repealed nor enforced — ^laws
which by their anomalous non-existent existence tend to bring
-f^
MUTUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND RESPECT FOR LAIV 239
all legislation into a common contempt ? By what means shall
we explain the alarming increase of crime in many Western
lands during the last thirty years? How shall we explain that
conspicuous indifference to the sacredness of human life which
is unquestionably a characteristic of some Western lands? It
is vain to dogmatise in regard to matters which from the na-
ture of the case are beyond the reach of statistics. Still we
must confess to a decided conviction that human hfe is safer .
in a Chinese city than in an American city — safer in Peking nnJioJ^'^-^''
than in New York. We believe it to be safer for a foreigner ^
to traverse the interior of China than for a Chinese to traverse!
the interior of the United States. It must be remembered
that the Chinese as a whole are quite as ignorant as any body
of immigrants in the United States, and not less prejudiced.
They are, as we constantly see, ideal material for mobs. The
wonder is not that such outbreaks take place, but that they
have not occurred more frequently, and have not been more
fatal to the lives of foreigners.
It is a Chinese tenet that Heaven is influenced by the acts
and by the spirit of human beings. Upon this principle de-
pends the efficacy of the self-mutilation on behalf of parents,
to which reference was made in speaking of filial piety. That
this is a correct theory we are not prepared to maintain, yet
certain facts deserve mention which might seem to support it.
The geographical situation and extent of the Eighteen Prov-
inces of China bear a marked resemblance to that part of the
United States of America east of the Rocky Mountains. The
erratic eccentricities of the climate of the United States are,
as Httle Marjorie Fleming remarked of the multiplication table,
" more than human nature can bear." It was Hawthorne
who observed of New England that it has " no climate, but
only samples." Contrast the weather in Boston, New York,
or Chicago with that of places in the same latitude in China.
It is not that China is not, as the geographies used to affirm
^
240 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
of the United States, " subject to extremes of heat and cold,"
for in the latitude of Peking the thermometer ranges through
about one hundred degrees Fahrenheit, which ought to afford
sufficient variety of temperature to any mortal.
But in China these alternations of heat and cold do not fol-
low one another with that reckless and incalculable lawless-
ness witnessed in the great republic, but with an even and
unruffled sequence suited to an ancient and a patriarchal sys-
tem. The Imperial almanac is the authorised exponent of the
threefold harmony subsisting in China between heaven, earth,
and man. Whether the Imperial almanac is equally trust-
worthy in all parts of the Emperor's broad domain we do not
know, but in those regions with which we happen to be famil-
iar the almanac is itself a signal-service. At the point marked
for the " establishment of spring," spring appears. In several
different years we have remarked that the day on which the
" establishment of autumn " fell was distinguished by a marked
change in the weather, after which the blistering heats of sum-
mer returned no more. Instead of allowing the frost to make
irregular and devastating irruptions in every month of the year
— as is too often the case in lands where democracy rules —
the Chinese calendar fixes one of its four-and-twenty " terms "
as "frost-fall." A few years ago this "term" fell on the 23d
of October. Up to that day no lightest frost had been seen.
On the morning of that day the ground was covered with
white frost, and continued to be so covered every morning
thereafter. We have noted these correspondences for some
years, and have seldom observed a variation of more than the
usual three days of grace.
It is not inanimate nature only which in China is amenable
to reason and to law, but animated nature as well. For some
years we have noticed that on a particular day in early spring
the window-frames were adorned with several flies, where for
many months no flies had been seen, and on each occasion we
MUTUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND RESPECT FOR LAiV 841
have turned to the Imperial almanac with a confidence justi-
fied by the event, and ascertained that this particular day was
the one assigned for the " stirring of insects " !
It has been remarked that there is in the blood of the Eng-
lish-speaking race a certain lawlessness, which makes us in-
tolerant of rules and restless under restraints. " Our sturdy
English ancestors," says Blackstone, "held it beneath the con-
dition of a freeman to appear, or to do any other act, at the
precise time appointed." But for this trait of our doughty
forefathers the doctrine of personal Uberty and the rights of
man might have waited long for assertion.
But now that these rights are tolerably well established, \
might we not judiciously lay somewhat more emphasis upon '^ I
the importance of subordinating the individual will to the
public good, and upon the majesty of law ? And in these
directions have we not something to learn from the Chinese?
CHAPTER XXIV.
MUTUAL SUSPICION.
IT is an indisputable truth that without a certain amount of
mutual confidence it is impossible for mankind to exist in
an organised society, especially in a society so highly organised
and so complex as that of China. Assuming this as an axiom,
it is not the less necessary to direct our attention to a series of
phenomena, which, however inharmonious they may appear
with oiur theory, are sufficiently real to those who are acquainted
with China. Much of what Jve shall have to say of the mutual
suspicion of the Chinese is by no means pecuHar to this peo-
ple ; it is rather a trait which they share in common with all
Orientals, the manifestations of which are doubtless much
modified by the genius of Chinese institutions. The whole
subject is intimately connected with that of mutual responsi-
bility, already discussed. Nothing is more likely to excite the
suspicion not of the Chinese only but of any human being,
than the danger that he may be held to account for something
which has no concern whatever with himself, but the conse-
quences of which may be most serious.
The first manifestation which attracts a sti anger's attention
of the chronic suspicion prevailing in China is the existence
in all parts of the Empire of lofty walls which enclose all cities.
The fact that the word for city is in Chinese the equivalent
for a walled city, is as significant as the fact that in the Latin
language the word which denoted army also meant drill or
practice. The laws of the Empire require that every city
243
<J
o
MUTUAL SUSPICION 243
shall be enclosed by a wall of a specified height. Like other
laws this statute is much neglected in the letter, for there are
many cities the walls of which are allowed to crumble into
such decay that they are no protection whatever, and we know
of one district city invested by the T'ai-p'ing rebels and occu-
pied by them for many months, the walls of which, although
utterly destroyed, were not restored at all for more than a
decade afterwards. Many cities have only a feeble mud
rampart, quite inadequate to keep out even the native dogs,
which climb over it at will. But in all these cases the occa-
sion of these lapses from the ideal state of things is simply
the poverty of the country. Whenever there is an alarm of
trouble, the first step is to repair the walls. The execution of
such repairs affords a convenient way in which to fine oflScials
or others who have made themselves too rich in too short a
time.
The firm foundation on which rest all the many city walls
in China is the distrust which the government entertains of the
people. However the Emperor may be in theory the father
of his people, and his subordinates called " father and mother
officials," all parties understand perfectly that these are purely
technical terms, like plus and minus, and that the real relation " ^^
between the people and their rulers is that between children 1 „^.(JI5^
and a stepfather. The whole history of China appears to be)
dotted with rebellions, most of which might apparently have
been prevented by proper action on the part of the general
government if taken in time. The government does not ex-
pect to act in time. Perhaps it does not wish to do so, or
perhaps it is prevented from doing so. Meantime, the people
slowly rise, as the government knew they would, and the offi-
cials promptly retire within these ready-made fortifications,
like a ttu-tle into its shell or a hedgehog within its ball of
quills, and the disturbance is left to the slow adjustmeni of
the troops.
^T
244 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
The lofty walls which enclose all premises in Chinese, as in
other Oriental cities and towns, are another exemplification
of the same traits of suspicion. If it is embarrassing for a
foreigner to know how to speak to a Chinese of such places
as London or New York, without unintentionally conveying
the notion that they are " walled cities," it is not less difficult
to make Chinese who may be interested in Western lands
understand how it can be that in those countries people often
have about their premises no enclosures whatever. The im-
mediate, although unwarranted, inference on the part of the
Chinese is that in such countries there must be no bad char-
acters of any kind.
I The almost universal massing of the rural Chinese popula-
-^ -. tion in villages, which are in reality miniature cities, is another
illustration of mutual suspicion. The object is protection, not
..^^ from a foreign enemy, but from one another. The only excep-
tions to this agglomeration of Chinese dwellings with which
we are acquainted, is in the case of some mountainous regions
where the land is so barren that it is incapable of supporting
more than one or two families, the people being so poor that
they have no dread of thieves, and the province of Szechuan,
in which, as Mr. Baber mentions, " the farmer and his work-
people live, it may be said, invariably in farm-houses on their
land, and the tendency is to the separation rather than to the
congregation of dwellings." If this exception to the general
rule was made because the expectation of peace in that re-
mote province was thought to be greater than in others, as
Baron von Richthofen suggested, it has proved, as Mr. Baber
remarks, an expectation which has suffered many and grievous
disappointments, especially — although after a long-previous
peace — ^in the days of the T'ai-p'ing rebels.
A most significant illustration of the Chinese — and also
Oriental — suspicion found in social life is to be seen in the
theory and practice in regard to woman. What that theory is
is sufficiently well known. An entire chapter would scarcely
MUTUAL SUSPICION 245
do justice to this branch of the subject. As soon as they
come to the age of puberty, girls are proverbially a commod-
ity as " dangerous as smuggled salt." When once they are
betrothed they are kept far more secluded than before. The
smallest and most innocent circumstance is sufficient to start
vicious and malevolent gossip, and it is a social axiom that
scandals cluster about a widow's door. While Chinese women
have incomparably more liberty than their sisters in Turkey
or in India,* Chinese respect for women cannot be rated as
high. Universal ignorance on the part of women, universal
subordination, the existence of polygamy and concubinage —
these are not good preparations for that respect for woman-
hood which is one of the fairest characteristics of Western
civilisation. It would be easy to cite popular expressions in
illustration of the views which the Chinese hold of women in
general, and which may be regarded as the generalisations of
long experience. She is spoken of as if it were her nature to
be mean, short-sighted, and not to be trusted — she is consid-
ered to be an incarnation of jealousy, as in the phrase, " it is
impossible to be more jealous than a woman," where the word
"jealous" suggests, and is intended to suggest, another word
with the same sound, but meaning " poisonous." This theory
is well embodied in a verse of ancient Chinese poetry, of
which the following lines are a translation :
" The serpent's mouth in the green bamboo.
The yellow hornet's caudal dart ;
Little the injury these can do ;
More venomous far is a woman's heart."
* The existence of this liberty, is not, however, to be judged of by
superficial indications. A lady who resided for some years in the Indian
city of Delhi, and subsequently at the capital of the province of Shansi,
remarked that fewer Chinese women were ordinarily to be seen upon the
streets of the latter city, than Indian women upon the streets of the former
one. Yet this circumstance does not at all conflict with the truth of the
statement to which this note is appended.
246 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
These views are incidentally exemplified with a fine and un-
conscious impartiality in the very structure of the Chinese
language, in a manner to which attention has been often
directed. An excellent scholar in Chinese, in response to a
request from the writer, examined with care a list of one hun-
dred and thirty-five of the more common characters which are
written with the radical denoting woman, and found that
fourteen of them conveyed a meaning which might be classed
as good, such as the words " good," " skilful," and the like ;
of the remainder, thirty-five are bad, and eighty-six indifferent
in meaning. But those classed as bad contain some of the
most disreputable words in the whole language. The radical
for woman combined with that denoting shield signifies " de-
ceitful, fraudulent, villainous, traitorous, selfish " ; while three
women in combination convey the ideas of "fornication,
adultery, seduction, to intrigue."
There are said to be two reasons why people do not trust
one another: first, because they do not know one another,
and second, because they do. The Chinese think that they
have each of these reasons for mistrust, and they act accord-
ingly. While the Chinese are gifted with a capacity for com-
bination which at times seems to suggest the union of chemical
atoms, it is easy to ascertain by careful inquiry at the proper
sources and at the proper times, that the Chinese do not by
any means trust one another in the implicit way which the
external phenomena might imply. Members of the same
family are constantly the victims of mutual suspicion, which is
fanned by the women who have married into the family, and
who as sisters-in-law are able to do much, and who frequently
do what they can, to foment jealousy between their husbands
in regard to the division of the proceeds of the common
labour.
Not to enlarge upon this aspect of domestic life, which by
itself might occupy a chapter, we pass to the notice of the
MUTUAL SUSPICION Ht
same general state of things among those who are not united
by the complex ties of Chinese family life. A company of
servants in a family often stand to one another in a relation
of what may be called armed neutrality, that is, if they have
not been introduced by some one who is responsible for them
all. If anything comes out to the disadvantage of any one
of them, his first question to himself is not, " How did the
master find that out?" but "Who told him of me?" Even
if the servant is well aware that his guilt has been proved, his
first thought will be to show that some other servant had a
grudge against him. We have known a Chinese woman to
change colour and leave a room in great dudgeon on hearing
loud voices in the yard, because she supposed that as there
was an angry discussion, it must be about her, whereas the
matter was in relation to a pile of millet stalks bought for fuel,
for which a dealer demanded too high a price.
It is this kind of suspicion which fans the fires of dissension
that are almost sure to arise when a servant has been unex-
pectedly discharged. He suspects every one but himself, is
certain that some one has been speaking ill of him, insists upon
being told the allegations against him, although he knows that
there are half a score of reasons, any of which would justify
his immediate dismissal. His " face " must be secured, and
his suspicious nature must be gratified. These occurrences
take place in Chinese families as well as in foreign families
with Chinese servants, but not in the same degree, because a
Chinese servant has learned how far he can impose upon the
good-nature of the foreigner, as he would never think of doing
in the case of a Chinese master. It is for this reason that so
many foreigners have in their employ Chinese servants whom
they ought to have discharged long ago, and would have dis-
charged if they had dared. They know that the mere pro-
posal of such a thing will be the stirring up of a hornet's nest,
the central figure of which will be the accused and "disgraced"
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248 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
servant, and they have not the courage to make a strike for
liberty, lest in the case of failure their condition should be
worse than before.
There is a story of an Austrian city which was besieged by
the Turks in the middle ages, and which was just on the point
of capture. At a critical moment an Austrian girl bethought
herself of a number of bee-hives, which she at once brought
and tumbled over the wall on the Turks, now almost up to the
parapet. The result was a speedy descent on the part of the
Turks, and the saving of the city. The tactics of a Chinese
often resemble that of the Austrian maiden, and his success is
frequently as signal, for this kind of a disturbance is such that,
as a Latin professor said of a storm, one would much rather
"face xtperalium" than "face \\. per se^ No wonder that
the adage runs, " If you employ one, do not suspect him ; if
you suspect him, do not employ him." The Chinese way in
such cases is simply to close one's eyes and to pretend that
one does not see, but for a foreigner this may not be so simple
and easy to achieve.
We find it necessary to impress upon our children, when
they come to be of an age to mingle in the world on their own
account, that it is well not to be too confiding in strangers.
This kind of caution does not need to be conveyed to the
Chinese in their early years, for it is taken in with their
mother's milk. It is a proverb that one man should not enter
a temple, and that two men should not look together into a
well. And why, we inquire in surprise, should one man not
enter a temple court alone? Because the priest may take
advantage of the opportunity to make away with him ! Two
men should not gaze into a well, for if one of them is in debt
to the other, or has in his possession something which the
other wants, that other may seize the occasion to push his
companion into the well !
Another class of examples of mutual suspicion are those
MUTUAL SUSPICION 249
arising in the ordinary affairs of everyday life. There is a
freedom and an absence of constraint in Western lands which
in China is conspicuously absent. To us it seems a matter of
course that the simplest way to do a thing is for that reason
the best. But in China there are different and quite other
factors of which account must be taken. While this is true
in regard to everything, it is most felt in regard to two matters
which form the warp and woof of the lives of most Chinese —
money and food. It is very difficult to convince a Chinese
that a sum of money, which may have been put into the
hands of another to be divided between many persons, has
been divided according to the theoretical plan, for he has no
experience of any divisions of this sort, and he has had ex-
tended experience of divisions in which various deductions in
the shape of squeezes were the prominent features. In like
manner, it is very hard to make an arrangement by which one
Chinese shall have charge of the food provision for others, in
which, if close inquiry is made, it shall not appear that those
who receive the food suppose that the one who provides it is
retaining a certain proportion for his own use. The dissatis-
faction in such cases may possibly be wholly suppressed, but
there is no reason to think that the suspicion is absent because
it does not manifest itself upon the surface. Indeed, it is
only a foreigner who would raise the question at all, for the
Chinese expect this state of things as surely as they reckon on
friction in machinery, and with equal reason.
It is the custom of waiters in Chinese inns, upon leaving
the room of a guest who has just paid his bill, to shout out
each item of the account, not in order to sound the praises of
him who has spent most money — as some travellers have sup-
posed— but for the much more practical purpose of letting the
other waiters know that the one who thus publicly declares
the receipts is not secreting a portion of the gratuity, or " wine-
money," which they invariably expect.
>
250 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
If any matter is to be accomplished which requires con-
sultation and adjustment, it will not do in China, as it might
in any Western land, to send a mere message to be delivered
at the home of the person concerned, to the effect that such
and such terms could be arranged. The principal must go
himself, and he must see the principal on the other side. If
the latter should not be at home, the visit must be repeated
until he is found, for otherwise no one would be sure that the
matter had not been distorted in its transmission through other
media.
Frequent references have been made to the social solidarity
of the Chinese. In some cases the whole family or clan all
seem to have their fingers in the particular pie belonging to
some individual of the family. But into such affairs a person
with a different siuname is, if he be a wise person, careful not
to intrude any of his fingers, lest they be burned. It is indeed
a proverb that it is hard to give advice to one whose surname
is different from one's own. What does this fellow mean by
mixing himself up in my affairs? He mtist have an object,
and it is taken for granted that the object is not a good one.
If this is true of those who are life-long neighbours and friends,
how much more is it true of those who are mere outsiders, and
who have no special relations to the persons addressed.
. The character meaning " outside," has in China a scope and
^ I L-/^ a significance which can only be comprehended by degrees.
^ The same kind of objection which is made to a foreigner be-
cause he comes from an " outside " country, is made to a vil-
lager because he comes from an " outside " village. This is
true with much greater emphasis if the outsider comes from
no one knows where, and wants no one knows what. " Who
knows what drug this fellow has in his gourd?" is the inevita-
ble inquiry of the prudent Chinese in regard to a fresh arrival.
If a traveller happens to get astray and arrives at a village
u
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MUTUAL SUSPICION 251
after dark, particularly if the hour is late, he will often find
that no one will even come out of his house to give a simple
direction. Under these circumstances the writer once wan-
dered arotmd for several hours, unable to get one of the many
Chinese who were offered a reward for acting as a guide even
to listen to the proposal.
All scholars in Chinese schools spend their time in shouting
out their lessons at the top of their voices, to the great injury
of their vocal organs, and to the almost complete distraction
of the foreigner. This is " old-time custom," but if the inquiry ^
for the reason be relentlessly pushed, one is told that without
this audible assurance the teacher would suspect that his pupils
were not devoting their exclusive attention to their lessons.,
The singular practice of making each scholar turn his back
upon the teacher during the recitation is likewise due to the
desire of the teacher to be certain that the pupil is not furtively
glancing at the book held in the master's hand!
It is not every form of civilisation which emphasises the
duty of entertaining strangers. Many of the proverbs of Sol-
omon in regard to caution towards strangers gain a new mean-
ing after actual contact with Orientals, but the Chinese have
carried their caution to a point which it would be hard to sur-
pass. A Chinese teacher employed by a foreigner to pick up
children's ballads and sayings heard a httle boy singing a non-
sense song which was new to the teacher, who asked the httle
fellow to repeat the words, whereupon the child fled terror-
stricken and was seen no more. He was a t3'^pical product of
Chinese environment. If a man has become insane and has
strayed away from home, and his friends scour the country-
side, hoping to hear something of him, they know very well
that the chances of finding traces of him are shght. If he has
been at a particular place, but has disappeared, the natural
inquiry of his pursuers would be, What did you do with him?
252 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
This might lead to trouble, so the safest way, and the one sure
to be adopted if the inquirer is a stranger, is to assume total
ignorance of the whole affair.
The same thing will not seldom happen, as we have learned
by experience, when a Chinese stranger tries to find a man
who is well known. In a case of this sort, a man whose ap-
pearance indicated him to be a native of an adjacent province
inquired his way to the village of a man of whom he was in
quest. But on his arrival he was disappointed to find that the
whole village was unanimous in the affirmation that no such
man was known there, and that he had never even been heard
of. This wholesale falsehood was not concocted by any de-
liberate prevision, for which there was no opportunity, but was
simultaneously adopted by a whole villageful of people, with
the same unerring instinct which leads the prairie-dog to dive
into its hole when some unfamiliar object is sighted.
In all instances of this kind, the slight variations of local
dialect afford an infallible test of the general region from
which one hails. A countryman who meets others will be ex-
amined by them as to his abode and its distance from a great
number of other places, as if to make sure that he is not de-
ceiving them. In the same manner, scholars are not content
with inquiring of a professed literary graduate when he " en-
tered," but he will not improbably be cross-examined upon the
theme of his essay, and how he treated it. In this way it is
not difficult, and is very common, to expose a fraud. It is
hopeless for a man to claim to be a native of a district the
pronunciation of which differs by ever so little from his own,
for his speech bewrayeth him. Not only will a stranger find
it hard to get a clue to the whereabouts of a man, his possible
business with whom excites instantaneous and general suspi-
cion, but the same thing may be true, as we have also had re-
peated occasion to know, in regard to a whole village. The
writer once sent several Chinese to look up certain other
MUTUAL SUSPICION 253
Chinese who had been for a long time in a foreign hospital
under treatment. Very few of them could be found at all.
In one case a man who ventured to hold conversation with
the strangers gave his siurname only, which was that of a large
clan, but positively refused to reveal his name, or " style." In
another instance, a village of which the messengers were in
search persistently retreated before them, like an ignus fatuus^
and at last all traces of it disappeared, without its having been
found at all! Yet once the strangers were probably within a
mile or two of it, and in the case just referred to, the stranger
who could not find the man for whom he was looking, proved
to have been within ten rods of his dwelling at the time he
was baffled.
•The writer is acquainted with an elderly man who has a
well-to-do neighbour with whom he was formerly associated in
one of the secret sects so common in China. On asking him
about this neighbour, whose house was at a httle distance from
his own, it turned out that the two men, who had grown up
together and had passed more than sixty years in proximity,
never /net. " And why was this? " " Because the other man
is getting old and does not go out much." " Why, then, do
you not sometimes go to see him and talk over old times?
Are you not on good terms? " The person addressed smiled
the smile of conscious superiority, and shook his head. " Yes,"
he said, " we are on good terms enough, but he is well off, and
I am poor, and if I were to go there it would make talk./
Folks would say. What is he coming here for ? "
A conspicuous illustration of the instinctive recognition by
the Chinese of the existence of their own mutual suspicion is
found in the reluctance to be left alone in a room. If this
should happen, a guest will not improbably exhibit a restless
demeanour and will perhaps stroll out into the passage, as
much as to say, " Do not suspect me ; I did not take your
things, as you see ; I put them behind me." The same thing
254 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
is sometimes observed when a self-respecting Chinese calls
upon a foreigner.
Nothing is so certain to excite the most violent suspicion on
the part of the Chinese as the death of a person under circum-
stances which are in some respects peculiar. A typical ex-
ample of this is the death of a married daughter. Although,
as already mentioned, the parents are powerless to protect her
while she lives, they are in some degree masters of the situation
when she has died, provided that there is anything to which
any suspicion can be made to attach itself. Her suicide is an
occasion on which the girl's parents no longer adopt their pro-
verbial position of holding down the head, but, on the contrary,
hold their head erect, and virtually impose their own terms.
The refusal to come to an understanding with the family of
the girl under such circumstances would be punished by a long
and vexatious lawsuit, the motive for which would be in the
first instance revenge, but the main issue of which would
eventually be the preservation of the " face " of the girl's
family.
There is an ancient saying in China, that when one is walk-
ing through an orchard where pears are grown it is well not to
adjust one's cap, and when passing through a melon patch it
is not the time to lace one's shoes. These sage aphorisms rep-
resent a generalised truth. In Chinese social life it is strictly
necessary to walk softly, and one cannot be too careful. This
is the reason why the Chinese are so constitutionally reticent
at times which seem to us so ill-chosen. They know as we
cannot that the smallest spark may kindle a fire that shall
sweep a thousand acres.
The commercial life of the Chinese illustrates their mutual
suspicion in a great variety of ways. Neither buyer nor seller
trusts the other, and each for that reason thinks that his in-
terests are subserved by putting his affairs for the time being
out of his own hands into those of a third person who is strictly
MUTUAL SUSPICION 255
neutral, because his percentage will only be obtained by the
completion of the bargain. No transaction is considered as
made at all, until " bargain money " has been paid. If the
matter is a more comprehensive one, something must be put
into writing, for " talk is empty, while the mark of a pen is
final."
The chaotic condition of the silver market in China is due
partly to the deep-seated suspicion which cash-shops entertain
for their customers, and which customers cherish towards the
cash-shops, in each case with the best grounds. Every chopped
dollar in south China, every chopped piece of chopped silver
in any part of China, is a witness to the suspicious natiure of
this great and commercial people ; keen as they are to effect
a trade, they are keener still in their reluctance to do so. The
very fact that a customer, whether Chinese or foreign makes
no difference, wishes to sell silver after dark is of itself suspi-
cious, and it will not be surprising if every shop in the city
should successively impart the sage advice to wait till to-
morrow.
The banking system of China appears to be very compre-
hensive and intricate, and we know from Marco Polo that
bank-bills have been in use from a very ancient period. But
they are not by any means universal in their occurrence, and I / jc" ^
all of them appear to be exceedingly limited in the range of'
their circulation. The banks of two cities ten miles apart will
not receive each other's bills, and for a very good reason.
The high rate of Chinese interest, ranging from twenty-four ' • ,.* *^' ^^
to thirty-six or more per cent., is a proof of the lack of mutual , (.2-^t>
confidence. The larger part of this extortionate exaction does
not represent payment for the use of money, but insurance on
risk, which is very great. The almost total lack of such forms
of investments as we are so famihar with in Western lands is , ^.^^l^sXT*^
due not more to the lack of development of the resources of
the Empire, than to the general mistrust of one another among
,r
256 • CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
the people. " The affairs of life hinge upon confidence," and
it is for this reason that a large class of affairs in China will
for a long time to come be dissociated from their hinges, to
the great detriment of the interests of the people.
A curious example of Chinese commercial suspicion was
afforded a few years ago by a paragraph in the newspapers,
giving an account of the condition of things in the Chinese
colony in the city of New York. The Chinese organisation
probably does not differ from that of other cities where the
Chinese have established themselves. They have a Municipal
Government of their own, and twelve leading Chinese are the
officers thereof. They keep the money and the papers of the
Municipality in a huge iron safe, and to insure absolute safety
the safe is locked with twelve ponderous brass (Chinese) pad-
locks all in a row, instead of the intricate and beautiful com-
bination locks used in the New York banks. Each one of
the twelve members of the Chinese Board of Aldermen has
a key to one of these padlocks, and when the safe is opened
all twelve of them must be on hand, each to attend to the un-
locking of his own padlock. One of these distinguished alder-
men having inopportunely died, the affairs of the Municipality
were thrown into the utmost confusion. The key to his pad-
lock could not be found, and if it had been found no one
would have ventured to take the place of the deceased, through
a superstitious fear that the dead man would be jealous of his
successor, and would remove him by the same disease of which
he himself had died. Even the funeral bills could not be paid
until a special election had taken place to fill the vacancy.
This little incident is indeed a window through which those
who choose to do so may see some of the prominent traits of
the Chinese character clearly illustrated — capacity for organisa-
tion, commercial ability, mutual suspicion, unlimited credulity,
and tacit contempt for the institutions and inventions of the
men of the West.
MUTUAL SUSPICION 257
The structure of the Chinese government contains many
examples of the effects of lack of confidence. Eunuchs are
an essentially Asiatic instance in point, and they are supposed
to have existed in China from very ancient times ; but during
the present dynasty this dangerous class of persons has been
dealt with in a very practical way by the Manchus, and de-
prived of the power to do the same mischief as in past ages.
Another example of the provision for that suspicion which
must inevitably arise when such inharmonious elements as the
conquerors and the conquered are to be co-ordinated in high
places, is the singular combination of Manchus and Chinese
in the administration of the government, as well as the arrange-
ment by which the president of one of the Six Boards may be
the vice-president of another. By these checks and balances
the equihbrium of the state machinery has been preserved.
The censorate furnishes another illustration of the same thing,
on an extended and important scale.
Those whose knowledge of the interior workings of the
Chinese administration entitles their opinions to weight, assure
us that the same mutual suspicion which we have seen to be
characteristic of the social life of the Chinese is equally char-
acteristic of their official life. It could not indeed be other-
wise. Chinese nature being what it is, high officials cannot
but be jealous of those below them, for it is from that quarter
that their rivals are to be dreaded. The lower officials, on the
other hand, are not less suspicious of those above them, for it
is from that quarter that their removal may be at any moment
effected. There seems the best reason to believe that both
the higher and the lower officials alike are more or less jealous
of the large and powerful literary class, and the officials are
uniformly suspicious of the people. This last state of mind is
well warranted by what is known of the multitudinous semi-
poHtical sects, with which the whole Empire is honeycombed.
A District Magistrate will pounce down upon the annual gath-
258 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
ering of a temperance society such as the well-known Tsai-li,
which merely forbids opium, wine, and tobacco, and turn over
their anticipated feast to the voracious " wolves and tigers "
of his yamen, not because it is proved that the designs of the
Tsai-li Society are treasonable, but because it has been offi-
cially assumed long since that they must be so. All secret
societies are treasonable, and this among the rest. This
generalised suspicion settles the whole question, and whenever
occasion arises the government interposes, seizes the leaders,
banishes or exterminates them, and thus for the moment
allays its suspicions.
It is obvious that so powerful a principle as the one which
we are considering must be a strong reinforcement of that
innate conservatism which has been already discussed, to pre-
vent the adoption of what is new. The census which is occa-
sionally called for by the government does not occur with
sufficient frequency to make it familiar to the Chinese, even
in name. It always excites an immediate suspicion that some
ulterior end is in view. How real this suspicion is, is illus-
trated by an incident which occurred in a village next to the
one in which the writer lived. One of two brothers, hearing
that a new census had been ordered, took it for granted that
it signified compulsory emigration. It is customary in such
cases to leave one brother at home to look after the graves
of the ancestors, but the younger of the two, foreseeing that
he must go, promptly proceeded to save himself from the
fatigues of a long journey by committing suicide, thus check-
mating the government.
It is a mixture of suspicion and of conservatism which has
made the path of the young Chinese who were educated in
the United States such a bed of thorns from the time of their
return to the present day; it is the same fell combination
which shows itself in opposition to the inevitable introduction
of railways into China. Suspicion of the motives of the gov-
MUTUAL SUSPICION «59
emment will long prevent the reforms which China needs.
More than thirty years ago, when the importance of the issue
of small silver comage was pointed out to a distinguished
statesman in Peking, he repUed — with great truth — that it
would never do to attempt to change the currency of the
Empire. " Were it to be tried, the people would immediately
suppose that the government gained some advantage by it,
and it would not work."
Great obstacles are invariably thrown in the way of the
opening of mines, which, if properly worked, might make
China what she ought to be, a rich country. The "earthf^ J- Aj^
dragon " below ground, and peculation and suspicion abovej
it, are as yet too much for anything more than the most rudi-
mentary steps of progress in this most essential direction. No
matter how great advantages may be or how obvious, it is
almost impossible to get new things introduced when an all-
pervading suspicion frowns upon them. The late Dr. Nevius,
who did so much at Chefoo for the cultivation of a high
grade of foreign fruits in China, fruits which visibly yield an
enormous profit, was obliged to contend against this suspicion
at every step, and one less patient and less philanthropic
would have abandoned the project in disgust. When profits
are once assured this state of things of course gradually dis-
appears. But it is very real when inquiries are set on foot
like those by the Imperial Maritime Customs in regard to the
raising of silk-worms or tea. How can those who are inter-
ested in these matters possibly believe, in defiance of all the
accumulated experience of past ages, that the object of these
inquiries is not a tax, but the promotion of production and the
increase of the profits of skilled labour ? Who ever heard of
such a thing, and who can believe it when he does hear it ? The
attitude of the Chinese mind towards such projects as this may
be expressed in the old Dutch proverb, " Good-morrow to
you all, as the fox said when he leaped into the goose-pen! '
\l
260 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
\ It remains to speak of the special relations of this topic to
foreigners. The profound suspicion with which foreigners are
; regarded is often accompanied by, and perhaps largely due
' to, a belief, deep-rooted and ineradicable, that foreigners are
able to do the most impossible things with the greatest ease.
If a foreigner walks out in a place where he has not been
often seen, it is inferred that he is inspecting ihc feng-shui of
the district. If he surveys a river, he is determining the exist-
ence of precious metals. He is supposed to be able to see
some distance into the earth, and to have his eyes on what-
ever is best worth taking away. If he engages in famine re-
lief, it is not thought too much to suppose that the ultimate
object must be to carry off a large part of the population of
the district, to be disposed of in foreign lands. It is by reason
of these opinions onfefig-shui that the presence of foreigners
on the walls of Chinese cities has so often led to disturbances,
and that the height of foreign buildings in China must be as
carefully regulated as the location of a frontier of the Empire.
"XJ I The belief in the uniformity of nature appears to be totally
j lacking in China. Mr. Baber mentions a saying in Szechuan
of a certain hill, that opium grows without, and coal within.
But this is not simply a notion of the ignorant, for Professor
Pumpelly declares that one of the high officials in Peking told
i him the same thing, and used the statement as an argument
1 against the too rapid removal of coal deposits, the rate of the
growth of which is unknown. It is said that the late states-
man Wen Hsiang, having read Dr. Martin's " Evidences of
Christianity," was asked what he thought of it, to which he
replied that the scientific part of the work he was prepared to
1 accept, but the religions sections, in which the affirmation is
^ made that the earth revolves around the sun, were more than
) he could believe !
The whole subject of the entrance of foreigners into China
is beyond the Chinese intellect in its present state of develop-
MUTUAL SUSPICION 261
ment. Seeing Baron von Richthofen ride over the country
in what appeared to the people of Szechuan a vague and
purposeless manner, they imagined him to be a fugitive from
some disastrous battle. Many a Chinese, who has afterwards
come to understand the foreign barbarian all too well, has at
first sight of his form, especially if he chanced to be tall, been
seized with secret terror. Many Chinese women are persuaded
that if they once voluntarily enter a foreigner's dwelling the
fatal spell will work, and they will be bewitched ; if they are
at last prevailed upon to enter, they will not on any account
step on the threshold, nor look into a mirror when it may be
offered to their sight, for thus they would betray away their
safety.
A few years ago a young Chinese scholar from an inte-
rior province, where foreigners were practically unknown, was
engaged with some difficulty to come to the premises of the
writer to assist a new-comer in acquiring the language. He
remained a few weeks, when he recollected that his mother
was very much in need of his fihal care, and left, promising to
return at a fixed date, but was seen no more. During all the
time that he was on the foreigner's premises, this astute Con-
fucianist never once took a sip of tea, which was brought to
him regularly by the servants, nor ate a meal on the place, lest
he should imbibe besotment. When a foreign envelope was
handed to him by another teacher, that he might enclose the
letter which he had written to his mother assuring her that
thus far he was safe, and when it was shown him how this
same envelope was self-sealing, a little moistiu-e being applied
by the tongue, his presence of mind did not for an instant
forsake him, and he blandly requested the of^er teacher to do
the sealing, as he was not expert at it.
It is this frame of mind which leads to the persistent notions
in regard to Chinese books printed by foreigners. There is a
widespread conviction that they are drugged, and the smell of
262 CHINESE CHAR/tCTERlSTlCS
printer's ink is frequently identified as that of the " bewildering
drug " which is embodied in their composition. Sometimes
one hears that it is only necessary to read one of these books,
and forthwith he is a slave to foreigners. A slightly different
point of view was that taken by a lad of whom we have heard,
who, having read a little way in one of these tracts, threw it
down in terror and ran home, telling his friends that if one
should read that book and tell a lie, he would inevitably go to
hell! Sometimes colporteurs have found it impossible to give
away these books, not, as might be supposed, because of any
hostility to the contents, of which nothing was known and for
which nothing was cared, but because it was feared that the
gift would be made the basis on which to levy a kind of
blackmail, in a manner with which the Chinese are only too
familiar.
The same presupposition leads to a panic if a foreigner
injudiciously attempts to take down the names of Chinese
children, a simple process which has been known to be emi-
nently successful in breaking up a prospective school. The
system of romanising Chinese characters must in its initial
stages meet this objection and suspicion. Why should a for-
eigner wish to teach his pupils to write in such a way that
their friends at home cannot read what they say? All the
explanations in the world will not suffice to make this clear to
a suspicious old Chinese who knows that what has been good
enough for the generations that have come before his children
is good enough for them, and much better than the invention
of some foreigner of unknown antecedents. It may almost
be said that a general objection is entertained to anything
which a foreigner proposes, and often for the apparent reason
that he proposes it. The trait of " flexible inflexibility " leads
your Chinese friend to assure you in the blandest but most
unmistakable terms, that your proposal is very admirable and
very preposterous.
MUTUAL SUSPICION 263
Sarcasm is a weapon which, in the hands of a foreigner, is
not at all to the taste of the Chinese. A foreigner whose
knowledge of Chinese was by no means equal to the demands
which he wished to make upon it, in a fit of deep disgust at
some sin of omission or commission on the part of one of his
servants, called him in English a " humbug." " Deep ranklea
in his side the fatal dart," and at the earliest opportunity the
servant begged of a lady whose Chinese was fully equal to the
tax upon it, to be told what the dreadful word meant which
had been thus applied to him. The mandarins who seized
upon the blocks of Mr. Thom's translation of "^sop's Fables"
were in the same frame of mind as the Peking servant. These
officials could not help perceiving in the talking geese, tigers,
foxes, and lions some recondite meaning which could be best
nipped in the bud by suppressing the entire edition.
Some of the most persistent instances of Chinese suspicion
towards foreigners are manifested in connection with the many
hospitals and dispensaries now scattered over so large a part
of China. Amid the vast number of patients there are many
who exhibit an implicit faith and a touching confidence in the
good-will and the skill of the foreign physician. But there
are many others, of whose feelings we know much less, except
as the result of careful inquiry, who continue to believe the
most irrational rumours in regard to the extraction of eyes and
hearts for medicine, the irresistible propensity of the surgeon
to reduce his patients to mince-meat, and the fearful disposi-
tion said to be made of Chinese children in the depths of for-
eign cellars. A year or two of experience of the widespread
benefits of such an institution might be expected to dissipate
such idle rumours as the wind disperses a mist ; but they con-
tinue to flourish side by side with tens of thousands of success-
ful treatments, as mould thrives in warm damp spots diuing
the month of August.
The whole history of foreign intercourse with China is a
264 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
history of suspicion and prevarication on the part of the Chi-
nese, while it doubtless has not been free from grave faults on
the side of foreigners. It is a weary history to retrace, and its
lessons may be relegated to those who are charged with the
often thankless task of conducting such negotiations. But as
it often happens that private persons are obliged to be their
own diplomats in China, it is well to know how it should
be done. We will give a sample case which is an excellent
illustration. The question was about the renting of some
premises in an interior city, to which a local official on various
grounds took exception. The foreigner presentecj himself at
the interview which had been arranged, clad in the Chinese
dress, and armed with the necessary materials for writing.
After the preliminary conversation the foreigner slowly opened
his writing materials, adjusted his paper, shook out his pen,
examined his ink, with an air of intense preoccupation. The
Chinese official was watching this performance with the keenest
interest and the liveliest curiosity. " What are you doing ? "
he inquired. The foreigner explained that he was simply
getting his writing materials in order — " only that and nothing
more." " Writing materials ! What for?" "To take down
your answers," was the reply. The official hastened to assure
his foreign guest that this extremity would by no means be
called for, as the premises could be secured! How could this
magistrate be sure where he should next hear of this mysteri-
ous document, the contents of which he could not possibly
know?
China is a country which abounds in wild rumours, often of
a character to fill the heart with dread. Within the past few
years such a state of things has been reported among the
Chinese in Singapore that coohes positively refused to travel a
certain street after dark, on account of the imminent danger
of having their heads suddenly and mysteriously cut off. The
Empire is probably never free from such epochs of horror ; to
MUTUAL SUSPJCIOM 265
those concerned the terrors are as real as those of the French
Revolution to the Parisians of 1789. Infinite credulity and
mutual suspicion are the elements of the soil in which these
fearful rumours thrive, and on which they fatten. When they
have to do with foreigners, long and painful experience has
shown that they must not be despised, but must be taken in
the early stages of their development. None of them could
do serious harm if the local officials were only sincerely inter-
ested to stamp them out. In their ultimate outcome, when
they have been suffered to grow unchecked, these rumours
result in such atrocities as the Tientsin massacre. All parts of
China are well adapted to their rapid development, and there
is scarcely a province where they have not in some form oc-
curred. For the complete removal of these outbreaks, the
time element is as necessary as for the results of geologic ' | fij^
epochs. The best way to prevent their occurrence is to con-j f^,^
vince the Chinese, by irrefragable object-lessons, that foreign- ^
ers are the sincere well-wishers of the Chinese. This simplel fp/J A'*-'^^ "^
proposition once firmly estabUshed, then for the first time will
it be true that " within the four seas, all are brethren."
CHAPTER XXV.
THE ABSENCE OF SINCERITY.
THE Chinese ideograph which is commonly translated
"sincerity" is composed of the radicals denoting man
and words. Its meaning lies upon the surface. It is the last
in the series of the Five Constant Virtues enumerated by the
Chinese, and in the opinion of many who are well acquainted
with them it is in fact about the last virtue which in the Celes-
tial Empire is likely to be met with on any considerable scale.
Many who know the Chinese will agree with the observation
of Professor Kidd, who, after speaking of the Chinese doc-
trine of " sincerity," continues : " But if this virtue had been
chosen as a national characteristic, not only to be set at de-
fiance in practice, but to form the most striking contrast to
existing manners, a more appropriate one than sincerity could
not have been found. So opposed is the public and private
character of the Chinese to genuine sincerity, that an enemy
might have selected it as ironically descriptive of their con-
duct in contrast with their pretensions. Falsehood, duplic-
ity, insincerity, and obsequious accommodation to favourable
circumstances are national features remarkably prominent."
How far this judgment is justified by the facts of Chinese life
we may be able better to decide when we shall have consid-
ered those facts in detail.
We have assumed that it is a reasonable theory, and one
which we believe is supported by the opinion of competent
266
THE ABSENCE OF SINCERITY 267
scholars, that the Chinese of the present day do not differ to / H
any great extent from the Chinese of antiquity. There can} . -AniK-
hardly be a doubt that the standard of the Chinese and the
present standard of Western nations as to what ought to be
called sincerity differ widely. He who peruses the Chinese
Classics with a discerning eye will be able to read between
the lines much indirection, prevarication, and falsehood which
are not distinctly expressed. He will also find the Chinese
opinion of Occidental openness condensed into the significant
expression, " Straightforwardness without the rules of propri-
ety becomes rudeness." To an Occidental there is a signifi-
cance in the incident related of Confucius and Ju-pei, as found
in the Confucian "Analects," which is not at all apprehensible
to a Confucianist. The following is the passage, from Legge's (^ JLuJiX
translation : " Ju-pei wished to see Confucius, but Confucius ' jK
declined to see him on the ground of being sick. When the / n J^^
bearer of this message went out at the door, Confucius took \ '
his harpsichord, and sang to it, in order that Ju-pei might j
hear." The object of Confucius was to avoid the disagree-
able task of saying that the character of Ju-pei was not such
that Confucius wished to meet him, and he took this charac-
teristically Chinese way to do it.
The example of Confucius in this matter was toilowed by
Mencius. Being a guest in a certain kingdom he was invited
to court, but hoping that the king would honour him by the
first call, Mencius alleged sickness, and the next day, to show
that this was a mere excuse made a call elsewhere. That 7. . ^ « '
officer with whom Mencius spent the night held a long con- ^ ^
versation with the Sage as to the merits of this proceeding, jU<r^
but the discussion between them tunis exclusively on the ques-\
tion of propriety and precedent, and no reference whatever to
the morality of lying for the sake of convenience. There is
no apparent reason to suppose that this point was ever thought
of by any of the persons concerned, any more than it is by a
268 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
modem Confucian teacher who explains the passage to his
pupils.
There is no doubt that the ancient Chinese were far in
advance of their contemporaries in many other lands in the
instinct of preserving records of the past. Their histories,
however prolix, are undoubtedly comprehensive. Many West-
ern writers seem to feel the greatest admiration for Chinese
histories, and place unrestricted confidence in their statements.
The following paragraph is taken from an essay by Dr. J.
Singer, lector of the University of Vienna, translated and pub-
lished in the China Review, IvXy, 1888: "Scientific criticism
has long ago recognised and in ever-increasing extent proved
the historical reliability of the ancient documents of China.
Richthofen, for instance, the latest and most thorough-going
explorer of China, in discussing the surprisingly contradictory
elements which make up the character of the Chinese as ?
people, contrasts their strict truthfulness in recording historical
events and their earnestness in the search for correct knowl-
edge, whenever statistical facts are concerned, with that abso-
lute and generally sanctioned license in lying and dissimulation
which prevails everywhere in China, in popular intercourse
and in diplomatic negotiations." It should be borne distinctly
in mind that historical accuracy may be exhibited in two
widely different lines: the narration of events in due order
and proportion, and the explanation of those events by an
analysis of character and motives. It is said by those who
have looked into Chinese histories most extensively, that
while in the former particular these works are no doubt far in
advance of the times in which they were written, in the latter
particular they are by no means adapted to carry the impres-
sion of that scrupulosity which Dr. Singer supposes. Without
expressing any opinion on a subject of which we have no spe-
cial knowledge, we will merely call attention to the singular,
if not unprecedented, circumstance that a nation which is
THE ABSENCE OF SINCERITY 269
affirmed to indulge in a license for lying, can at the same time
furnish successive generations of historiographers who are
reverent of the truth. Do not the same passions which have
distorted the history of other lands operate in China? Do
not the same causes produce in China the same effects as in
the rest of the world ?
It is important to bear in mind that not only is the teaching
of Confucianism greatly defective in the particular noted, but
the practice of the great Master himself is not such as to com-
mend historical fidelity. Dr. Legge, who does not lay much
stress on " certain charges which have been made from un-
important incidents in the Sage's career," attaches great
importance to the manner in which Confucius handled his
materials in the " Spring and Autumn Annals," a work which
contains the record of the kingdom of Lu for two hundred
and forty-two years, down to within two years of Confucius'
death. The following paragraphs are taken from Dr. Legge's
lectiu^e on Confucianism, published in his volume on "The
Religions of China " : " Mencius regarded the Ch'un Ch'iu
[" Spring and Autumn Annals "] as the greatest of the Mas-
ter's achievements, and says that its appearance struck terror
into rebellious ministers and unfilial sons. The author him-
self had a similar opinion of it, and said that it was from it
men would know him, and also (some of them) condemn him.
Was his own heart misgiving him when he thus spoke of men
condemning him for the Ch'un C/i'iu ? The fact is that the
annals are astonishingly meagre, and not only so, but evasive
and deceptive. 'The Ch'un Ch'iu^ says Kung Yang, who
commented on it, and supplemented it within a century after
its composition, ' conceals [the truth] out of regard to the high
in rank, to kinship, and to men of worth.' And I have shown
in the fifth volume of my ' Chinese Classics ' that this ' con-
cealing ' covers all the ground embraced in our three English
words — ignoring, concealing, and misrepresenting. What
2 70 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
shall we say to these things ? . . . I often wish that I could
cut the knot by denying the genuineness and authenticity of
the ' Spring and Autumn ' as we now have it ; but the chain
of evidence that binds it to the hand and pencil of Confucius
in the close of his life is very strong. And if a foreign student
take so violent a method to enable him to look at the charac-
ter of the philosopher without this flaw of historical untruthful-
ness, the governors of China and the majority of its scholars
will have no sympathy with him, and no compassion for his
mental distress. Truthfulness was one of the subjects that
Confucius often insisted on with his disciples ; but the Ch'un
Ch'iu has led his countrymen to conceal the truth from them-
selves and others wherever they think it would injimously
affect the reputation of the Empire or of its sages."
We have just seen that those who claim truthfulness for the
Chinese in their histories are ready enough to admit that in
China truth is confined to histories. It is of course impossible
to prove that every Chinese will lie, and we have no wish to
do so if it were possible. The strongest testimony on this
point can be gathered from the Chinese themselves, whenever
their consciences have been sufficiently awakened and their
attention directed to the matter. Such persons are frequently
heard to say of their race, as the South Sea Island chief said
of his : " As soon as we open our mouths a lie is bom." To
us, however, it does not seem that the Chinese lie for the sake
of lying, as some have supposed, but mainly for the sake of
certain advantages not otherwise to be had. " Incapable of
speaking the truth," says Mr. Baber, "they are equally in-
capable of believing it." A friend of the writer received a
visit from a Chinese lad who had learned English, and who
wished to add to his vocabulary an expression meaning " You
lie." He was told the phrase, but cautioned not to use it to
a foreigner, as the result would certainly be that he would
be knocked down. He expressed unfeigned surprise at this
THE ylBSENCE OF SINCERITY 27*
Strange announcement, for to his mind the words conveyed a
meaning as harmless as the remark, " You are humbugging
me." Mr. Cooke, the China correspondent of the London
Times in 1857, speaking of the antipathy of Occidentals to be
called hars, observes : " But if you say the same tiling to a
Chinaman, you arouse in him no sense of outrage, no sen-
timent of degradation. He does not deny the fact. His
answer is, ' I should not dare to lie to your Excellency.' To
say to a Chinaman, * You are an habitual liar, and you are
meditating a He at this moment,' is like saying to an English-
man, ' You are a confirmed punster, and I am satisfied you
have some horrible pun in your head at this moment.'"
The ordinary speech of the Chinese is so full of insincerity,
which yet does not rise to the dignity of falsehood, that it is
very difficult to learn the truth in almost any case. In China
it is literally true that a fact is the hardest thing in the world
to get. One never feels sure that he has been told the whole
of anything. Even where a person is seeking your help, as,
for example, in a lawsuit, and wishes to put his case entirely
in your hands, nothing is more probable than that you will
discover subsequently that several important particulars have
been suppressed, apparently from the general instinct of pre-
varication and not of malice prepense, since the person him-
self must be the only loser by the suppression. The whole of
anything does not come out till afterwards, no matter at what
point you take it up. A person who is well acquainted with
the Chinese will not feel that he understands a matter because
he has heard all about it, but will rather take the items which
he has heard and combine them with others, and finally call a
council of the Chinese whom he trusts most and hold a kind
of inquest over these alleged facts to ascertain what their real
bearing probably is.
Lack of sincerity, combined with the suspicion which has
been ahready discussed, accounts for the fact that a Chinese
272 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
will often talk for a very great length of time, saying practi-
cally nothing whatever. Much of the incomprehensibility of
the Chinese, so far as foreigners are concerned, is due to their
insincerity. We cannot be sure what they are after. We
always feel that there is more behind. It is for this reason
that when a Chinese comes to you and whispers to you mys-
teriously something about another Chinese in whom you are
much interested, you are not unlikely to experience a sink-
ing sensation in the pit of the stomach. You are uncertain
whether the one who is speaking is telling the truth, or whether
the character of the one of whom he is speaking has caved in.
One never has any assurance that a Chinese ultimatum is ulti-
mate. This proposition, so easily stated, contains in itself the
germ of multitudinous anxieties for the trader, the traveller,
and the diplomatist.
The real reason for anything is hardly ever to be expected,
and even when it has been given, one cannot be sure of this
fact. Every Chinese, the uneducated not less than others, is
by nature a kind of cuttle-fish capable of distilling any amount
of turbid ink, into which he can retreat with the utmost safety
so far as pursuit is concerned. If you are interviewed on a
journey and invited to contribute to the travelling-expenses of
some impecunious individual who hopes to exploit a new field,
your attendant does not say, as you would do, " Your ex-
penses are none of my affair, begone with you!" but "with
a smile that is child-like and bland," he explains that your
allowance of money is barely sufficient for your own use, and
so you will be deprived of the pleasure of contributing to your
fellow-traveller. We have seldom met a Chinese gate-keeper
who would say to a Chinese crowd, as a foreigner tells him to
do, " You cannot come in here," but he will observe instead,
that they must not come in, because the big dog will bite them
if they do.
There are few Chinese who have any well-developed con-
THE ABSENCE OF SINCERITY «73
science on the subject of keeping an engagement. This char-
acteristic is connected with their talent for misunderstanding,
and with their disregard of time. But whatever the real reason
for the failure, it is interesting to see what a variety of alleged
reasons exist for it. The Chinese in general resemble the man
who, being accused of having broken his promise, replied that
it was of no consequence, as he could make another just as
good. If it is a fault for which he is reproved, promises of
amendment flow in limpid streams from his lips. His acknowl-
edgments of wrong are complete — in fact, too complete, and
leave nothing to be desired but sincerity.
A Chinese teacher who was employed in inditing and com-
menting upon Chinese aphorisms, after writing down a fine
sentiment of the ancients, made an annotation to the effect
that one should never refuse a request in an abrupt manner,
but should, on the contrary, grant it in form, although with
no intention to do so in substance. " Put him off till to-mor-
row, and then until another to-morrow. Thus," he remarked
in his note, "you comfort his heart! " So far as we know
the principle here avowed is the one which is generally acted
upon by the Chinese who have debts for which payment is
sought. No one expects to collect his debt at the time that
he applies for it, and he is not disappointed ; but he is told
most positively that he will get it the next time, and the next,
and the next.
One of the ways in which the native insincerity of the
Chinese is most characteristically manifested is their demean-
our towards children, who are taught to be insincere without
consciousness of the fact either on their own part or on the
part of those who teach them. Before he is old enough to
talk, and when he can attach only the vaguest significance to
the words which he hears, a child is told that unless he does
as he is bid some terrific object, said to be concealed in the
sleeve of a grown person, will catch him. It is not uncom-
2 74 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
mon for foreigners to be put in the place of the unknown mon-
ster, and this fact alone would be sufficient to account for all
the bad words which we frequently hear applied to ourselves.
Why should not children who may have been affrighted with
our vague terrors when they were young, hoot us in the streets
as soon as they have grown large enough to perceive that we
are not dangerous but only ridiculous?
The carter who is annoyed by the urchins in the street yell-
ing after his foreign passenger, shouts to them that he will cap-
ture several of them, tie them on behind his cart and carry
them off. The boatman under like provocation contents him-
self with the observation that he will pour scalding water
upon them. The expressions, " I'll beat you," " I'll kill you,"
are understood by a Chinese child of some experience to con-
stitute an ellipsis for " Stop that! "
There is in Chinese a whole vocabulary of words which are
indispensable to one who wishes to pose as a " poUte " person,
words in which whatever belongs to the speaker is treated
with scorn and contempt, and whatever relates to the person
addressed is honoiu"able. The " poHte " Chinese will refer to
his wife, if driven to the extremity of referring to her at all, as
his " dull thorn," or in some similar elegant figure of speech,
while the rustic, who grasps at the substance of "politeness,"
although ignorant of its formal expression, perhaps alludes
to the companion of his joys and sorrows as his "stinking
woman." This trait of Chinese etiquette is not inaptly pre-
sented in one of their own tales, in which a visitor is repre-
sented as calling clad in his best robes, and seated in the
reception-room awaiting the arrival of his host. A rat which
had been disporting itself upon the beams above, insinuating
its nose into a jar of oil which was put there for safe-keeping,
frightened at the sudden intrusion of the caller, ran away, and
in so doing upset the oil-jar, which fell directly on the caller,
striking him a severe blow, and ruining his elegant garments
THE ABSENCE OF SINCERITY 375
with the saturation of the oil. Just as the face of the guest
was purple with rage at this disaster, the host entered, when
the proper salutations were performed, after which the guest
proceeded to explain the situation. "As I entered your
honourable apartment and seated myself under your honour-
able beam, I inadvertently terrified your honourable rat, which
fled and upset yoiu: honourable oil-jar upon my mean and in-
significant clothing, which is the reason of my contemptible
appearance in your honourable presence."
That very few foreigners can ever bring themselves to give
Chinese invitations in a Chinese way, goes without saying. It
requires long practice to bow cordially to a Chinese crowd as
one goes to a meal, and remark blandly, " Please all sit down
and eat," or to sweep "a cup of tea in a semicircle just as it is
raised to the lips, and, addressing one's self to the multitude,
observe with gravity, " Please all drink." Not less real is the
moral difficulty of exclaiming at suitable situations, "K'o-fou^
k'o-t'ou" signifying, " I can, may, must, might, could, would,
or should " (as the case may be) " give you a prostration " ; or
of occasionally interjecting the observation, "I ought to be
beaten, I ought to be killed," meaning that I have offended
against some detail of the rules of etiquette ; or of stopping in
the midst of a horseback ride, upon meeting a casual acquaint-
ance, and proposing to him, ''/ will get oil and you shall
mount," quite irrespective of the direction in which you may
be travelling, or the general irrationality of the procedure.
Yet the most ignorant and uncultivated Chinese will frequently
give these invitations with an air, which, as already remarked,
extorts admiration from the most unsympathetic Occidental,
who pays the unconscious tribute of him who cannot to him
who can. Such little ceremonies, as we have had repeated
occasion to observe, are enforced contributions on the part of
individuals to society at ^arge, that friction may be diminished,
and he who refuses to contribute will be punished in a man-
21 6 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
ner not the less real because it is oblique. Thus a carter who
neglects to take his cue down from his head and descend from
his cart when he has occasion to inquire the way, will not
improbably be given a wrong direction, and reviled besides.
To be able to determine what is the proper thing to be
done when Orientals offer presents, is in itself a science, and
perhaps as much so in China as in other countries. Some
things must not be accepted at all, while others must not be
altogether refused, and there is generally a broad debatable
land, in regard to which a foreigner can be siu"e of nothing
except that, left to his own judgment, he will almost infalhbly
do the wrong thing. In general, offers of presents are to be
suspected, especially those which are in any particular extraor-
dinary. Of this class are those which are tendered on the oc-
casion of the birth of a son, in reference to which the classical
dictum, " I fear the Greeks, even bearing gifts," is universally
and perennially appropriate. There is always something be-
hind such an offer, and, as the homely Chinese proverb says
of a rat dragging a shovel, the " larger end is the one that
is behind," or, in other words, what is (virtually) required in
return is much greater than what is given.
Of the hoUowness of these offers many foreigners in China
have had experience. We have ourselves had occasion to be
but too familiar with the details of a case in which a theatrical
exhibition was offered to a few foreigners by a Chinese village,
as a mark of respect, of course with the implied understanding
that it should be duly acknowledged by suitable feasts. When
this honom: was definitely declined, it was proposed to devote
the funds, or rather a small part of them, to the construction
of a building for public use, which, in the case of the first
village, was actually done. No sooner was this agreed upon
than eleven other villages, also deeply smitten with gratitude
for famine relief and medical help, proceeded to send deputa-
tions to make on their part formal offers of theatrical exhibi-
THE ylBSENCE OF SINCERITY 277
tions, which they were perfectly aware would be and must be
declined. The representatives of each village received the
intelligence of the refusal of these honours with the same sad
surprise, each of them offered to divert the funds in question
to the public building already referred to, and each one of
them allowed the matter to drop at that point, and no further
reference whatever was ever made to it by any one of them !
It is not foreigners only who are beset in this way. Rich
Chinese who have had the misfortune to be made happy, are
sometimes visited by their neighboiu-s with congratulatory gifts
of a trifling character, such as toys for a new-bom heir, pres-
ents the total value of which is practically nothing, but which
must be acknowledged by a feast — the invariable and always
appropriate Chinese response. It is on occasions like this
that the most inexpert in Chinese affairs learns to appreciate
the accuracy of the Chinese aphorism, which observes, " When
one is eating one's own, he eats till the tears come ; but when
he is eating the food of others, he eats till the perspiration
flows." It frequently happens under such conditions that the
host is obliged to assume the most cordial appearance of wel-
come, when he is inwardly fuming with rage which cannot
possibly be expressed without the loss of his " face," which
would be even more deadly than the loss of the food.
This suggests that large class of expressions which come
under the general designation of " face-talk." That much of
the external decorum with which foreigners are treated by
Chinese in their employ, especially in large cities, is a mere
external veneer, is easily seen by contrasting the behaviom- of
the same persons in public and in private. It is said that a
Chinese teacher who is a model of the proprieties at his for-
eign master's house, is not unlikely to " cut him dead " if he
meets the same master on the streets of Peking, for the reason
that to notice him at that time would lead to a pubUc recog-
nition of the fact that the Chinese pundit is in some way in-
2)3 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
debted to the foreign barbarian for replenishing the rice-bowl
of the Chinese — a circumstance which, however notorious,
must not be formally admitted, especially in public. It is very
common for a number of Chinese, on entering a room where
there is a foreigner, to salute all the Chinese in the room by
turn, and totally ignore the foreigner. A Chinese teacher is
not unlikely to flatter his foreign pupil with the information
that his ear is remarkably correct and his pronunciation almost
perfect, and that he will soon surpass all his contemporaries in
the acquisition of the language, while at the very same time
the peculiar errors of the pupil are not improbably matter of
sport between the teacher and his companions. In general, it
may be taken for granted that the last person to set one right
in matters of Chinese speech is the teacher who is employed
for that purpose.
One of the ways in which the formal and hollow politeness
of the Chinese manifests itself, is in voluntary offers to do what
it is very desirable should be done, but which others cannot or
will not undertake. If the offer comes to nothing we should
not be disappointed, for it is not improbable that it was made
with the definite knowledge that it could not be carried out,
but the " face " of the friend who made the offer is assiu-ed.
In like manner, if there is a dispute as to the amount of money
to be paid at an inn, your carter will probably come forward
as arbitrator, and decide that he will make up the difference
himself, which he does by taking the amount required from
your cash-bag. Or if he were to pay the money from his own
funds, he would bring in his bill for the same, and if he was
reminded that he offered of his own accord to make it up, he
would reply, " Do you expect the man who attends the funeral
to be buried in the coffin too? "
There is a great deal of real modesty in China notwith-
standing appearances to the contrary, but it cannot for a mo-
ment be doubted that there is likewise a great deal of mock
ThB /IB$£NCE of sincerity 279
modesty, both on the part of men and of women. It is very
common to hear it said of some disagreeable matter, that it is
wholly unmentionable, that the words are totally unutterable,
etc., when all parties are perfectly aware that this is a mere
form denoting reluctance to express an opinion. The very
persons who use this high-toned language would be ready
enough to employ the foulest expressions of vituperation
whenever they were excited by anger.
False modesty is matched by a false sympathy, which con-
sists of empty words ; but for this the Chinese are not to be
blamed, as they have no adequate material out of which sym-
pathy for others can be developed in any considerable quanti-
ties and for any length of time. But empty sympathy is not
so repugnant to good taste as that mockery of sympathy and
of all true feeling which contemplates death with boisterous
merriment. Mr. Baber mentions a Szechuan coohe who burst
into a delighted laugh at the spectacle of two dogs devour-
ing a corpse on the tow-path. Mr. Meadows tells us that his
Chinese teacher laughed till he held his sides at the amusing
death of his most constant companion. It is no explanation
of these strange exhibitions, often observed in the case of
parents at the death of children of whom they were fond, that
long grief has dried up its external expression, for there is a
wide distinction between a silent grief and that rude mockery
of natural feeling which offends the instincts of .mankind.
It is, as we have had occasion to remark, several hundred
years since foreigners began to have commercial relations
with the Chinese. There have been multiplied testimonies to
the business honesty of those with whom these relations have
been held. Without generalising to a degree which might be
precarious, it is safe to say that there must be a good basis for
testimonies of this sort. As a specimen of what these testi-
monies are, we may quote the words of Mr. Cameron, Man-
ager of the Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, on occasion of hifi
28o CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
farewell to Shanghai : " I have referred to the high commer-
cial standing of the foreign community. The Chinese are in
no way behind us ourselves in that respect ; in fact, I know of
no people in the world I would sooner trust than the Chinese
merchant and banker. Of course there are exceptions to every
rule, but to show that I have good reasons for making such a
strong statement, I may mention that for the last twenty-five
years the bank has been doing a very large business with
Chinese in Shanghai, amounting, I should say, to hundreds of
millions of taels, and we have never yet met with a defaulting
Chinaman." Perhaps the best commentary on the statement
just quoted is the fact that within three years after it was
made, a Chinese compradore of the same bank in Hongkong
so crippled it by losses for which it did not appear that there
was any seciuity that a million dollars were subtracted from
the annual profits.
Whether there is an essentai difference between Chinese
business as conducted by wholesale and that by retail, we
have no means of knowing. But without abating in the least
from the value of the testimonies to which reference has been
made, it is a fair question whether a large part of results noted
are not due to the admirable system of mutual responsibility
already described — a system which Western nations would do
well to imitate. It is only natural that foreigners doing busi-
ness with the Chinese should avail themselves to the fullest
extent of such commercial safeguards as exist, and for such
results as are thus attained the Chinese are unquestionably
entitled to the fullest credit. Yet after all such acknowledg-
ments are made, it remains true, as testified by a vast array of
witnesses, and by wide and long observation, that the com-
merce of the Chinese is a gigantic example of the national
insincerity.
An interesting essay has been written by one who knew of
what he was affirming, on the process by which in ordinary
THE ABSENCE OF SINCERITY 281
trade two Chinese each succeed in cheating the other. The
relation of two such individuals is generally the relation be-
tween Jacob and Laban, or, as the Chinese phrase runs, it is
the iron brush meeting the brass wash-dish. It is a popular
proverb that to put a lad into trade is to ruin him. False
weights, false measures, false currency, and false goods — these
are phenomena from which it is difficult to escape in China.
Even in the great establishments which put up conspicuous
signs, notifying the pubhc that they will here find "goods
genuine, prices real," " positively no two prices," the state of
things does not correspond to the surface seeming.
We by no means intend to affirm such a proposition as that
there is no honesty to be found in China, but only that, so far
as our experience and observation go, it is literally impossible
to be siu"e of finding it anywhere. How can it be otherwise
with a people who have so little regard for truth? A well-
dressed scholar who meets a foreigner is not ashamed to affirm
in reply to a question, that he cannot read, and then when a
little book has been handed him to look at, he does not hesi-
tate to slink away in the crowd without paying the three cash
which is the cost. He has no sense of shame at such a pro-
ceeding, but rather a thrill of joy that he has circiunvented the
silly foreigner, who has so little astuteness as to trust a total
stranger. It is very common for a man who is buying from a
foreigner to give a cash less than the proper amount, alleging
that he has not another cash with him. When he is informed
that there is one in his ear at the moment, he takes it out with
reluctance, feehng that he has been defrauded. In like man-
ner a man who has spent * an old half-day " in trying to get
something free of cost, on the ground that he is totally with-
out money, will at last draw forth a string of a thousand cash,
hand it to you with an air of melancholy, and request you to
take out the proper amount. But if he is believed, and gets
282 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
something for nothing, he departs with a keen joy in his heart,
hke that of one who has slain a serpent.
The soHdarity of Chinese society finds one of its manifesta-
tions in the constant habit of borrowing what belongs to a
relative, with or without a notification of the intention so to
do. Many of the articles thus " borrowed " are at once put
in pawn, and if they are wanted again the owners must redeem
them. A Chinese boy in a mission school was detected in
stealing money from the single lady who had charge of the
scholars' rooms. Upon being confronted with irrefragable
proof of his guilt, he explained, with sobs, that when at home
he had always been in the habit of stealing from his mother,
and that his foreign teacher was so much like an own mother
to him that he was betrayed into stealing from her too !
While it is undoubtedly true that many of the evils which
are so conspicuous in Chinese social life are to be found also
in Western lands, it is of the utmost importance clearly to per-
ceive the points of essential contrast. One of these we take
to be that already mentioned, in that insincerity in China,
while not always to be met with, is always to be looked for.
Instances of this have been already cited in speaking of other
topics, and others might be referred to at almost any length.
An interesting volume remains to be written by some one
who has the requisite knowledge, on the theory and practice
of Chinese squeezes — a practice which extends from the Em-
peror on his throne to the lowest beggar in the Empire. With
that practical sagacity for which they are so deservedly noted,
the Chinese have reduced this business to a perfect system,
which can no more be escaped than one can escape the press-
ure of the atmosphere. Vicious and demoralising as the sys-
tem is, it is not easy to see how it can be done away with,
except by a complete reorganisation of the Empire.
The result of this state of things, and of the characteristics
THE ABSENCE OF SINCERITY 283
of the Chinese which have led to it, is that it is very difficult
for a foreigner to have to do with the Chinese in a practical
way, and on any extended scale, and yet contrive to preserve
his reputation — should he be so fortunate as to have one — as
a " superior man." It is a proverb constantly quoted, and
self-verifying, that carters, boatmen, inn-keepers, coohes, and
middlemen, irrespective of any specific offence, all deserve to
be killed on general principles. The relation of this class of
persons and others like them to foreigners is peculiar, for it is
known that foreigners will consent to a great deal of imposi-
tion rather than have a social typhoon, for which they gener-
ally lack both the taste and the talent ; yet it is by the social
typhoon that, in case of any supposed breach of equity on
the part of Chinese towards Chinese, the social atmosphere is
brought at last to a state of equilibrium.
He must be a rare man who has no blind side upon which
those Chinese who choose to do so cannot get. Not to be
too suspicious and not to be too confiding is a rare illustra-
tion of the golden mean. If one exhibits that just disappro-
bation towards insincerity which it seems to demand, the
Chinese, who are shrewd judges of human nature, set it down
to our discredit as a mark of " temper " ; while if we maintain
the placid demeanoiur of a Buddha absorbed in his Nirvana,
a demeanour which is not easy for all temperaments at all
times, we are at once marked as fit subjects for further and
indefinite exactions. That was a typical Chinese who, being
in foreign employ, saw one day a peddler on the street, vend-
ing little clay images of foreigners, cleverly executed and in
appropriate costume. Stopping for a moment to examine
them, he said to the dealer in images, "Ah, you play with
these toys ; I play with the real things."
It is unnecessary to do more than to allude in passing to
the fact that the Chinese government, so far as it is knowable,
appears to be a gigantic example of the trait which we are
284 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
discussing. Instances are to be found in the entire history of
foreign relations with China, and one might almost say in all
that is known of the relations of Chinese officials to the people.
A single but compendious illustration is to be found in those
virtuous proclamations which are issued with such unfailing
regularity, in such superlative abundance, with such felicity
of diction, on all varieties of subjects and from all grades of
officials. One thing only is lacking, namely, reality, for these
fine commands are not intended to be enforced. This is quite
understood by all concerned, and on this point there are no
illusions. " The life and state papers of a Chinese statesman,
like the Confessions of Rousseau, abound in the finest senti-
ments and the foulest deeds. He cuts off ten thousand
heads, and cites a passage from Mencius about the sanctity
of human life. He pockets the money given him to repair an
embankment and thus inundates a province, and he deplores
the land lost to the cultivator of the soil. He makes a treaty
which he secretly declares to be only a deception for the mo-
ment, and he declaims against the crime of perjury." Doubt-
less there may be pure-minded and upright officials in China,
but it is very hard to find them, and from the nature of their
environment they are utterly helpless to accomplish the good
which they may have at heart. When we compare the actual
condition of those who have had the best opportunity to be-
come acquainted with the Chinese Classics, with the teachings
of these Classics, we gain a vivid conception of how practically
inert they have been to bring society to their high standard.
" How many Chinese have you ever known whom you
would implicitly trust?" This question must be understood
to relate only to those who have come under no influences
outside of regular Chinese education. Different rephes will
be given by different persons according to their experience,
and according to their standard of judging of Chinese charac-
ter. Most foreigners would probably reply, "A very few,"
THE ABSENCE OF SINCERITY 285
" Six or eight," "A dozen," as the case may be. Occasionally
the answer will be, " A great many, more than I can remem-
ber." But we must believe that intelligent and discriminating
observers who can truthfully give the latter reply are exceed-
ingly few in number.
It is always prudent to observe what things a people take
for granted, and to act accordingly. As we have seen in the
discussion of mutual suspicion as a factor in Chinese social
life, the Chinese take it for granted that they are not to trust
others, for reasons which they well understand. It is pre-
cisely this state of things which makes the future of China so
full of uncertainty. The governing class as a whole is not
the best but the worst in the Empire. An inteUigent Taotai
remarked to a foreigner that " the officials under the Emperor
are all bad men and ought to be killed, but it would be of no
use to kill us, as the next incumbents would be just as bad as
we." The serpent, as the Chinese adage runs, knows his own
hole, and it is a significant fact that the official class in China
is profoundly distrusted by the class next below it, the mer-
cantile. They know that the so-called " reformation " is but
a superficial shell, which will soon scale off. A Chinese mason
spending a vast amount of time smoothing the outside of
chimneys and roofs which he has built badly with untempered
mortar, and which he knows will smoke and leak at the first
opportunity, is a type of many things in China.
There is wealth enough in China to develop the resources
of the Empire, if there were but the confidence, without which
timid capital will not emerge from its hiding-place. There is
learning enough in China for all its needs. There is no lack of
talent of every description. But without mutual confidence,
based upon real sincerity of purpose, all these are insufficient
for the regeneration of the Empire.
A few years ago the writer was consulted by an intelhgent
Chinese in regard to the possibiUty of doing something for
286 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
the relief of a district that has great trouble with its wells,
which are made in the usual Chinese way, and bricked up by
a wall begun from the top and lowered as the well is deep-
ened. But in this particular locality the soil is of such a char-
acter that after a time the whole ground sinks, taking the well
and its brick lining with it, leaving only a hole, which event-
ually caves in and becomes dry. Like the attempt to remedy
the evils of this unfortunate district in the province of Chihii
is any prescription to cure the ills from which China is suffer-
ing, and has long suffered, which does not go deep enough to
reach the roots of character. All superficial treatment will prove
at last to be but burying cart-loads of excellent material in a
Slough of Despond.
The Temple of Heaven, Peking.
CHAPTER XXVI. [
POLYTHEISM, PANTHEISM, ATHEISM.
CONFUCIANISM, as a system of thought, is among the i
most remarkable intellectual achievements of the race^
It is true that the Western reader cannot escape a feeling that
much of what he finds in the Confucian Classics is jejune.
But it is not merely by perusing them that we are to receive
our most forcible impressions of what the Chinese Classics
are and have been, but by contemplating their effects. Here is
the Chinese race, by far the mightiest aggregation of human
beings in any one nation on earth, " with a written history ex-
tending as far back as that of any other which the world has
known, the only nation that has throughout retained its nation-
ality, and has never been ousted from the land where it first
appeared," existing, for aught that appears, in much the same
way as in hoary antiquity. What is the explanation of this
imexampled fact ? By w^hat means has this incomputable
mass of human beings, dwelling on the Chinese plains from
the dawn of history until now, been controlled, and how is it
that they appear to be an exception to the tiniversal law of the
decay and death of nations ?
Those who have investigated this subject most thoroughly -, . f)
are imited in declaring that this result is due to the fact that, /
whereas other nations have depended upon physical force, the / / ,7
Chinese have depended upon moral forces. No student of ( i^^^A-^.*:-*"^
history, no observant traveller who knows human nature, can
fail to be impressed, to the point of deep awe, with the thought
288 CHINESE CHARy4CrERISTICS
of the marvellous restraining power which Chinese morality
has exerted upon the race from the earliest times until now.
"It would be hard to overestimate," says Dr. WiUiams, "the
influence of Confucius in his ideal princely scholar, and the
power for good over his race which this conception has ever
since exerted. The immeasurable influence in after-ages of
the character thus portrayed proves how lofty was his own
standard, and the national conscience has ever since assented
to the justice of the portrait." " The teaching of Confucian-
ism on human duty," says Dr. Legge, "is wonderful and ad-
mirable. It is not perfect, indeed. But on the last three of
the four things which Confucius delighted to teach — Jitters,
^thics, devotion of soul, and truthfulness — his utterances are
in harmony both with the Law and the Gospel. A world
ordered by them would be a beautiful world."
The entire freedom of the Chinese classical works from any-
thing which could debase the mind of the readers is a most
important characteristic which has been often pointed out, and
which is in the greatest possible contrast to the literatures of
India, Greece, and Rome. " No people," says Mr. Meadows^N
" whether of ancient or modern times, has possessed a sacred
literature so completely exempt as the Chinese from licentious/
descriptions, and from every offensive expression. There is
not a single sentence in the whole of the Sacred Books and
their annotations that may not be read aloud in any family
circle in England. Again, in every other non-Christian coun-
try, idolatry has been associated with human sacrifices and with
the deification of vice, accompanied by licentious rites and
orgies. Not a sign of all this exists in China."
The direct personal responsibility of the Emperor to heaven
for the quality of his rule ; the exaltation of the people as of
more importance than the rulers ; the doctrine that the vir-
tuous and able should be the rulers, and that their rule must
be based upon virtue ; the comprehensive theory of the five
POLYTHEISM, PANTHEISM, ATHEISM 289
<}J-(L^
relations of men to each other; the doctrine that no one
should do to another what he would not have that other do toj *
him — these points have stood out like mountain-peaks from '
the general level of Chinese thought, and have attracted the
attention of all observers. In closing what we have to say | -i^^jp^^Ci^
of the Chinese, we wish to place emphasis upon the moral iU.^^^
excellence^if -the.- Confucian system, for it is only by putting
those excellences in their true light that we can hope to arrive
at any just comprehension of the Chinese people. Those
excellences have made the Chinese pre-eminently amenable to
moral forces. The employment of the classical writings in
the civil service examinations for successive ages has unified
the minds of the people to a marvellous degree, and the
powerful motives thus brought into play, leading every candi-
date for a degree to hope for the stabihty of the government
as a prerequisite to his own success, has doubtless been a
principal factor in the perpetuation of the Chinese people to
this present time.
Whether the Chinese ever did have a knowledge of one
true God is indeed a point of considerable interest. Those
who have examined most critically the classical writings of
the Chinese assure us that the weight of scholarship is upon \>7
the side of the affirmative. By others who have a claim to ' \]\n^
an independent judgment, this proposition is altogether denied.
If the Chinese ever did recognise the true God, that knowl-
edge has certainly been most effectually lost, hke an inscrip-
tion on an ancient coin now covered with the accumulated
rust of millenniums. To us the question seems to be of very
much less practical concern than some would make it, and for
our present purposes it may be altogether ignored. What\
concerns us in our present inquiry is neither a historical nor a |
theoretical matter, but a practical one, to wit. What is the )
relation which exists between the Chinese and their divinities Py
It is in some cases not difficult to trace the stages by which
290 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
the heroes and worthies of antiquity from being honoured
, came to be commemorated, and from being merely commem-
^y^-^^^ orated came to be worshipped. All the gods of China may
(\ be said to have been dead men, and by the rite of ancestral
\^^^ worship it may be affirmed that in a sense all the dead men
of China are gods. Temples are constantly erected by the
consent of the Emperor, to men who while living had in vari-
ous ways distinguished themselves. It is impossible to say
that any one of these men may not in the slow evolution of
/ages rise to the highest place among the national divinities.
.'There can be no doubt whatever that as a nation the Chinese
1 are polytheistic.
That there is a tendency in man towards the worship of
nature is a mere truism. The recognition of irresistible and
unknown forces leads to their personification and to external
acts of adoration, based upon the supposition that these forces
are sentient. Thus temples to the gods of wind, thunder, etc.,
abound. The north star is an object of constant worship.
There are temples to the sun and to the moon in Peking, in
connection with the Imperial worship, but in some regions
the worship of the sun is a regular act of routine on the part
of the people in general, on a day in the second month which
they designate as his " birthday." Early in the morning the
villagers go out to the east to meet the sun, and in the even-
ing they go out towards the west to escort him on his way.
This ends the worship of the sun for a year.
An exceedingly common manifestation of this nature-wor-
hip is in the reverence for trees, which in some provinces (as,
for example, in northwestern Honan) is so exceedingly com-
mon that one may pass hundreds of trees of all sizes, each of
them hung with bannerets indicating that it is the abojje of
some spirit. Even when there is no external symbol of wor-
ship, the superstition exists in full force. If a fine old tree is
seen standing in front of a wretched hovel, it is morally certain
t
POLYTHEISM, PANTHEISM, ATHEISM 291
that the owner of the tree dare not cut it down on account of
the divinity within.
It is often supposed that the Emperor is the only individual
in the Empire who has the prerogative of worshipping heaven.
The very singular and interesting ceremonies which are per-
formed in the Temple of Heaven by the Emperor in person
are no doubt unique. But it would be news to the people of
China as a whole that they do not and must not worship
heaven and earth each for themselves. The houses often
have a small shrine in the front wall facing the south, and in
some regions this is called the shrine to heaven and earth.
Multitudes of Chinese will testify that the only act of religious 1 .
worship which they ever perform (aside from ancestral rites) \ V^ ^^~^\
is a prostration and an offering to heaven and earth on the
first and fifteenth of each moon, or, in some cases, on the be- ( '.L*«-^^
ginning of each new year. No prayer is uttered, and after a
time the offering is removed, and, as in other cases, eaten.
What is it that at such times the people worship ? Sometimes
they affirm that the object of worship is " heaven and earth."
Sometimes they say that it is " heaven," and again they call
it " the old man of the sky." The latter term often leads to
an impression that the Chinese do have a real perception of a
personal deity. But when it is ascertained that this supposed
"person" is frequently matched by another called "grand-
mother earth," the value of the inference is open to serious
question. In some places it is customary to offer worship to
this " old man of the sky " on the nineteenth of the sixth
moon, as that is his " birthday." But among a people who
assign a " birthday " to the sun, it is superfluous to inquire
who was the father of " the old man of the sky," or when he
was bom, for on matters of this sort there is absolutely no
opinion at all. It is difficult to make an ordinary Chinese 1
understand that such questions have any practical bearing.
KJ^^.^^L■r .,
29a CHINESE CHARACl ERISTICS
He takes the tradition as he finds it, and never dreams of
X
x^^-^
/
^ /] ^ raising any inquiries upon this point or any other. We have
J ' seldom met any Chinese who had an intelhgible theory with
( regard to the antecedents or qualities of " the old man of the
1 sky," except that he is supposed to regulate the weather, and
' hence the crops. The wide currency among the Chinese
people of this term, hinting at a personality, to whom, how-
ever, so far as we know, no temples are erected, of whom no
image is made, and to whom no worship distinct from that to
" heaven and earth " is offered, seems to remain thus far un-
explained.
The word " heaven " is often used in the Chinese Classics
in such a way as to convey the idea of personality and will.
But it is likewise employed in a manner which suggests very
little of either, and when we read in the commentary that
"heaven is a principle," we feel that the vagueness of the
term is at its maximum. To this ambiguity in classical use
corresponds the looseness of meaning given to it in everyday
/j-^^^^ life. The man who has been worshipping heaven, upon being
pressed to know what he means by " heaven," will frequently
/\J\^ i reply that it is the blue expanse above. His worship is there-
fore in harmony with that of him who worships the powers of
natiure, either individually or collectively. His creed may be
described in Emersonian phrase as "one with the blowing
clover and the falling rain." In other words, he is a panthe-
5^ \ ist. This lack of any definite sense of personality is a fatal
^ _ ^ flaw in the Chinese worship of " heaven."
The polytheism and pantheism of the lower classes of Chi-
\ nese are matched in the upper classes by what appears to be
I pure atheism. From the testimony of those who know most
( on this point, from the abundant surface indications, and from
antecedent probability, we have no difficulty in concluding
that there never was on this earth a body of educated and
POLYTHEISM, PANTHEISM, ATHEISM 293
cultivated men so thoroughly agnostic and atheistic as the 1 p
mass of Confucian scholars,* The phrase " antecedent prob- j ''^^'^''^'^-fr
abihty " refers to the known influence which has been exerted ^ "^-^
over the literati of China by the materialistic commentators
of the Sung Dynasty. The authority of Chu Hsi, the leamed[),L5 KA^--^^
expounder of the Chinese Classics, has been so overwhelming'
that to question any of his views has long been regarded as
heresy. The effect has been to overlay the teachings of the
Classics with an interpretation which is not only materialistic,
but which, so far as we understand it, is totally atheistic.
After the Yellow River emerges from the mountains of
Shansi and Shensi, it continues its way for hundreds of miles
to the sea. In successive ages it has taken many different
routes, ranging through six or seven degrees of latitude, from
the mouth of the Yang-tse-Kiang to that of the Peiho. But
wherever it has flowed it has carried ruin, and has left be-
hind it a barren waste of sand. Not unlike this has been the
materialistic current introduced by the commentators of the
Sung Dynasty into the stream of Chinese thought, a current
which, having flowed unchecked for seven centiuies, has left
behind it a moral waste of atheistic sand, incapable of sup-
porting the spiritual life of a nation. Taoism has degener-l /(1loc<^ '•"^-^
ated into a system of incantations against evil spirits. It has^
largely borrowed from Buddhism to supplement its own in-
nate deficiencies. Buddhism was itself introduced to provide
for those inherent wants in the nature of man which Confu-
cianism did little or nothing to satisfy. Each of these forms /'.^dU^r^JL^
of instruction has been greatly modified by the others. Any
kind of organisation which offers a method of practising virtue
will be patronised by those who happen to be disposed to lay
up a httle merit, and to whom this avenue appears as good as
• Mr. Meadows remarks that every consistent Confucianist ought to
be a blank atheist, but as human nature is seldom ideally self-consistent,
many Confucianists either believe in the gods, or think that they do so.
-f'
294 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
any other. Any kind of a divinity which seems adapted to
exert a favourable influence in any given direction will be
patronised, just as a man who happens to need a new um-
brella goes to some shop where they keep such goods for
j,v*-\ / sale. To inquire into the antecedents of the divinity who is
\ thus worshipped, no more occurs to a Chinese than it would
M ^ A>JC occur to an Englishman who wanted the umbrella to satisfy
fj^y^"^ ' himself as to the origin of umbrellas, and when they first came
into general use.
It is not uncommon to meet with learned disquisitions upon
the question as to the number of Buddhists and Taoists in
China. In our view this question is exactly paralleled by an
inquiry into the number of persons in the United Kingdom
who use ten-penny nails as compared with the number of
those who eat string-beans. Any one who wants to use a
ten-penny nail will do so if he can obtain it, and those who
like string-beans and can afford to buy them will presump-
tively consume them. The case is not different in China as
regards the two most prominent " doctrines." Any Chinese
who wants the services of a Buddhist priest, and who can
f^^ afford to pay for them, will hire the priest, and thus be "a
Buddhist." If he wants a Taoist priest, he will in like man-
ner call him, and this makes him " a Taoist." It is of no
consequence to the Chinese which of the two he employs, and
he will not improbably call them both at once, and thus be
at once' " a Buddhist " and " a Taoist." Thus the same indi-
vidual is at once a Confucianist, a Buddhist, and a Taoist, and
with no sense of incongruity. Buddhism swallowed Taoism,
Taoism swallowed Confucianism, but at last the latter swal-
lowed both Buddhism and Taoism together, and thus " the
three religions are one ! "
The practical relation of the Chinese to their " three relig-
ions " may be illustrated by the relations of an Anglo-Saxon to
the materials of which his language is composed : "Saxon and
<>
»^~
POLYTHEISM, PANTHEISM, ATHEISM ^95
Norman and Dane are we ; " but even were it possible to de-
termine our remote origin, the choice of our words would not
be influenced in the smallest degree by the extent to which we
may happen to have Saxon or Norman blood in our veins.
Our selection of words will be determined by our mental hab-
its, and by the use to which we wish to put the words. The
scholar will use many Latin words, with liberal admixture of *
the Norman, while the farmer will use mostly plain Saxon terms.! 1 ^JxvV^
But in either case the Saxon is the base, to which the othen 1
stocks are but additions. In China Confucianism is the base/ ^ [f^^^^
and all Chinese are Confucianists, as all English are Saxons.V
To what extent Buddhist or Taoist ideas, phraseology, and
practices may be superimposed upon this base, will be deter- ''^^'^^-
mined by circumstances. But to the Chinese there is no more
incongruity or contradiction in the combination of the " three
religions " in one ceremony, than there is to our thought in the
interweaving of words of diverse national origin in the same
sentence.
It is always difficult to make a Chinese perceive that two ? n \
forms of belief are mutually exclusive. He knows nothing (S
about logical contradictories, and cares even less. He has
learned by instinct the art of reconciling propositions which
are inherently irreconcilable, by violently affirming each of
them, paying no heed whatever to their mutual relations. He
is thus prepared by all his intellectual training to allow the
most incongruous forms of belief to unite, as fluids mingle
by endosmosis and exosmosis. He has carried " intellectual
hospitality" to the point of logical suicide, but he does not
know it, and cannot be made to understand it when he is told.
Two results of this mechanical union of creeds are very .
noteworthy. The first is the violence done to the innate in-' <^*A^*'^*' ' \)
stinct of order, an instinct for which the Chinese are espe-j
cially distinguished, which is conspicuously displayed in the'
elaborate machinery of the carefully graded ranks of officials,
296 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
from the first to the ninth, each marked by its own badge,
and having its own special limitations. Something analogous
to this might certainly have been looked for in the Chinese
pantheon, but nothing of the sort is found. It is vain to in-
quire of a Chinese which divinity is supposed to be the greater,
the " Pearly Emperor " or Buddha. Even in the " Temple-to-
all-the-gods " the order is merely arbitrary and accidental, and
subject to constant variations. There is no regular gradua-
' tion of authority in the spirit world of the Chinese, but such
utter confusion as, if found on earth, would be equivalent to
chronic anarchy. This state of things is seen in a still more
conspicuous manner in the " Halls of the Three Religions,"
where the images of Confucius, of Buddha, and of Laotze
are displayed in a close harmony. The post of honour is in
the centre, and this we should expect to be conceded to
Confucius, or if not to him — since he made no claim of any
kind to divinity — then to Laotze. There is good reason to
think that this question of precedence has been in by-gone
days the occasion of acrimonious disputes, but in nearly all
the instances of which we happen to have heard, it has been
settled in favour of Buddha, albeit a foreigner!
Another significant result of the union of all beliefs in China,
is the debasement of man's moral nature to the lowest level
found in any of the creeds. This is in accordance with a law
akin to that by which a baser currency invariably displaces
that which is better. All the lofty maxims of Confucianism
have been wholly ineffective in guarding the Confucianists
from fear of the goblins and devils which figure so largely in
Taoism. It has often been remarked, and with every appear-
ance of truth, that there is no other civilised nation in exist-
ence which is under such bondage to superstition and credu-
lity as the Chinese. Wealthy merchants and learned scholars
are not ashamed to be seen, on the two days of the month
set apart for that purpose, worshipping the fox, the weasel,
POLYTHEISM, P/iNTHEISM, ATHEISM 297
the hedgehog, the snake, and the rat, all of which in printed
placards are styled " Their Excellencies," and are thought to ) 4^^-^
have an important effect on human destiny.
It is not many years since the most prominent statesman in
China fell on his knees before a water-snake which some one
had been pleased to represent as an embodiment of the god y^rt-ts ^
of floods, supposed to be the incarnation of an official of a
former dynasty, whose success in dealing with brimming rivers &-'-***^
was held to be miraculous. This habit of worshipping a
snake, alleged to be a god, whenever floods devastate China
appears to be a general one. In districts at a distance from
a river, any ordinary land-serpent will pass as a god and " no
questions asked." If the waters subside, extensive theatrical
performances may be held in honour of the god who has
granted this boon, to wit, the snake, which is placed on a tray
in a temple or other public place for the purpose. The Dis-
trict Magistrate, and all other officers, go there every day to
prostrate themselves and to bum incense to the divinity. . A
river-god is generally regarded as the rain-god in regions ad-
jacent to waterways, but at a little distance in the interior, the
god of war, Kuan Ti, is much more likely to be worshipped
for the same purpose ; but sometimes both are supplanted by ^ .
the goddess of mercy. To a Chinese this does not seem atj \jj^ jv-*.*^ ,
all irrational, for his mind is free from all presiunptions as toi 1 v_ai^'
the unity of nature, and it is very hard for him to appreciate'
the absurdity, even when it is demonstrated to him.
In connection with these prayers for rain, another curioitf ao^ *
and most significant fact has often been brought to our notice/ \J^-^^^ •>
In the famous Chinese novel called " Travels to the West, i t}^^^^^
one of the principal characters was originally a monkey hatched: 0-
from a stone, and by slow degrees of evolution developed into
a man. In some places this imaginary being is worshipped as
a rain-god, to the exclusion of both the river-god and the god
of war. No instance could put in a clearer light than this the
298 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
total lack in China of any dividing line between the real and
the fictitious. To a Western mind causes and effects are cor-
relative. What may be the intuitions of cause and effect in
the mind of a Chinese who prays to a non-existent monkey to
induce a fall of rain, we are not able to conjecture.
The gods of the Chinese being of this heterogeneous descrip-
tion, it is of importance to inquire what the Chinese do with
them. To this question there are two answers : they worship
them, and they neglect them. It is not very uncommon to
meet with estimates of the amount which the whole Chinese
nation expends for incense, paper money, etc., in the course
of a year. Such estimates are of course based upon a calcu-
lation of the apparent facts in some special district, which is
taken as a unit, and then used as a multiplier for all the other
districts of the Empire. Nothing can be more precarious than
so-called " statistics " of this sort, which have literally no more
validity than that census of a cloud of mosquitoes which was
taken by a man who " counted until he was tired, and then
estimated."
There is very little which one can be safe in predicating of
the Chinese Empire as a whole. Of this truth the worship in
Chinese temples is a conspicuous example. The traveller
who lands in Canton, and who perceives the clouds of smoke
arising from the incessant offerings to the divinities most pop-
ular there, will conclude that the Chinese are among the most
idolatrous people in the world. But let him restrain his judg-
ment until he has visited the other end of the Empire, and he
will find multitudes of the temples neglected, absolutely un-
visited except on the first and fifteenth of the moon, in many
cases not then, and perhaps not even at the New- Year, when,
if ever, the Chinese instinct of worship prevails. He will find
hundreds of thousands of temples the remote origin of which
'l}-'^ \is totally lost in antiquity, and which are occasionally repaired,
but of which the people can give no account and for which
>
POLYTHEISM, PANTHEISM, ATHEISM
299
they have no regard. He will find hundreds of square miles
of populous territory in which there is to be seen scarcely a
single priest, either Taoist or Buddhist. In these regions he
will generally find no women in the temples, and the children
allowed to grow up without the smallest instruction as to the
necessity of propitiating the gods. In other parts of China
the condition of things is totally different, and the external
rites of idolatry are interwoven into the smallest details of the
life of each separate day.
The rehgious forces of Chinese society may be compared to
the volcanic forces which have built up the Hawaiian Islands.
In the most northern and western members of the group the
volcanoes have for ages been extinct, and their sites marked
only by broken-down crater-pits now covered with luxvuiant
vegetation. But on the southeastern member of the group the
fires are still in active operation, and continue at intervals to
shake the island from centre to circumference. In some of'
the oldest parts of China there is the least attention paid to
temple worship, and in some of the provinces which at the,
time of China's greatest glory were wild and barbarous re-i
gions, idolatry is most flourishing. But it is easy to be misled'
by surface indications such as these. It is quite possible that
they may pass for more than they are worth, and before well-
grounded inferences can be safely drawn the subject requires
much fuller investigation than it has as yet received.
To "reverence the gods, but to keep at a distance from
them," was the advice of Confucius. It is not strange, there-
fore, that his followers at the present day consider respectful
neglect to be the most prudent treatment for the multitudinous
and incongruous divinities in the Chinese pantheon. When
contrasted with the Mongols or the Japanese, the Chinese
people are felt to be comparatively free from the bias of re-
ligion. It is common to see over the doors of temples the
classical expression, " Worship the gods as if they were pres-
H*
d
I1
(WV>^
300 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
ent." The popular instinct has taken at its true value the
uncertainty conveyed in the words " as if," and has embodied
them in current sayings which accurately express the state of
mind of the mass of the people :
" Worship the gods as if they came.
But if you don't, it's all the same."
" Worship the gods as if the gods were there.
But if you worship not, the gods don't care."
One step beyond respectful neglect of the gods is ceremonial
reverence, which consists in performing a certain routine in a
certain way, with no other thought than that of securing cer-
tain external results by so doing.
The idea of solemnity appears to be foreign to the Chinese
mind. We do not know how to speak of it without express-
ing an idea of what is merely decorum. All Chinese worship
of Chinese divinities, of which we have ever been cognisant,
has appeared to be either routine ceremonial, or else a mere
matter of barter — so much worship for so much benefit.
When " the old man of the sky " is spoken of as a being, and
to be reverenced, the uniform presentation of this aspect, to
the exclusion of all others, shows in a most decisive manner
^jj I what the worship really is. " Because we have our food and
-r^ ^ - I clothes from him," is the reply when a Chinese is asked
^ Op.iX*^""'^ why he makes periodical prostrations to this "person." Even
.^"^ \ when the individual has no definite opinions as to the real
^%_ y, existence of such a being, this does not prevent his confonnity
- ^-^ to the rite. The ancients did so, and he does as they did.
Whether it is of any use " who knows ? "
This habit of looking at religious ceremonial from a super-
ficial standpoint is well illustrated in a couplet which is some-
times posted, in a semi-satirical sense, upon the pillars of a
neglected shrine :
A Chinese Idol.
POLYTHEISM, PANTHEISM, ATHEISM
301
/A1
" When the temple has no priest, the wind sweeps the floor ;
If the building is without a light, the moon acts as lamp."
The gods are worshipped, just as in Western lands an in-
surance policy is taken out, because it is the safer way. " It
is better to believe that the gods exist," says the popular say-
ing, " than to believe that they do not exist ; " that is, if they
do not exist at all, there is no harm done ; whereas if they do
exist, and are neglected, they may be angry and revengeful.
The gods are supposed to be actuated by the motives which
are known to actuate men. It is a proverb that one who has
a sheep's head (for a temple offering) can get whatever he
desires, and also that those divinities, such as the "Three
Pure Ones," who have nothing special to bestow, will always
be poor, while the goddess of mercy and the god of war will
be the ones honoured and enriched.
Not only do the Chinese base the argument for the worship i
of the gods upon the strictly hypothetical foundation, " it can \
do no harm, and it may do some good," but they go a step /
farther, into a region where it is totally impossible for an Oc-
cidental mind to follow them. They often say and appear to \
think, " If you believe in them, then there really are gods ; f
but if you do not beheve in them, then there are none ! " This\
mode of speech (a mode of thought it can scarcely be called)
resembles that of a Chinese who should say : " If you believe
in the Emperor, then there is one ; but if you do not believe
in one, then there is no Emperor." When this analogy is
pointed out, the Chinese are ready enough to admit it, but they
do not appear to perceive it for themselves by any necessary
process.
There are many Chinese worshippers who are to be seen
making a prostration at every step, sometimes occupying very
long periods of time in going on tedious and difficult pilgrim-
ages.' When asked what is their motive for submitting to
these austerities, they will tell us that as there is so much false
.v^
SS-^-
ru.
302
CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
f^
'^
^r^
worship of the gods, it is necessary for worshippers to demon-
strate by these laborious means that their hearts are sincere.
Whatever may be said in regard to such exceptional instances,
we have no hesitation in affirming that all that has been al-
ready said of the absence of sincerity among the Chinese, in
their relations to one another, apphes with even greater force to
much of their worship. The photograph of a group of priests
belonging to a temple near Peking is a perfect masterpiece in
the representation of serpentine cunning. Men who have such
faces live Hves to correspond with their faces.
It is as true of the Chinese as it has been of other nations
in heathenism, that they have conceived of their gods as alto-
gether such as they are themselves, and not without reason,
for many of the gods are the countrymen of those who wor-
ship them. The writer once saw a proclamation posted in the
name of the goddess of mercy, informing the world that repre-
sentations had been made at the court of heaven to the effect
that mankind were waxing very vicious. The " Pearly Em-
peror " of the divinities, upon hearing this, was very angry, and
in a loud tone reviled all the subordinate gods because they
had failed to reform mankind by exhortation ! Human beings
are supposed to be surrounded by a cloud of spirits, powerful
for evil, but subject to bribes, flattery, cajolery, and liable to
be cheated. A Chinese is anxious to take advantage of the
man with whom he makes a bargain, and he is not less anx-
ious to take advantage — if he can — of the god with whom he
makes a bargain — in other words, the god to whom he prays.
Perhaps he purchases felicity by subscribing towards the re-
pair of a temple, but he not improbably has his subscription
of two hundred and fifty cash registered as a thousand. The
god will take the account as it stands. While the temple is in
process of repair a piece of red paper is perhaps pasted over
the eyes of each god, that he may not see the confusion by
which he is surrounded and which is not considered respectful.
POLYTHEISM, PANTHEISM, ATHEISM 303
If the temple is situated at the outskirts of a village, and is in
too frequent use by thieves as a place in which to divide their
booty, the door may be almost or even altogether bricked up,
and the god left to communicate with the universe as best he
can.
The familiar case of the kitchen-god, who ascends to heaven
at the end of the year to make his report of the behaviour!
of the family, but whose lips are first smeared with glutinous j
candy to prevent his reporting the bad deeds which he has.
seen, is a typical instance of a Chinese outwitting his celestial ■
superiors. In the same way a boy is sometimes called by a
girl's name to make the unintelligent evil spirits think that he
is a girl, in order to secure his lease of life. Mr. Baber speaks
of the murder of female infants in Szechuan, whose spirits are
subsequently appeased by mock money, which is burned, that
it may be conveyed to them for their expenses ! The temples
to the goddess who bestows children, unlike most other tem-
ples, are often frequented by women. Some of these temples
are provided with many little clay images of male children,
some in the arms of their patron goddess, and others disposed
like goods on a shelf. It is the practice of Chinese women/ axtc^-* r ^
on visiting these temples, to break off the parts which distin4 ' ^-"^
guish the sex of the child and eat them, so as to insure the
birth of a son. In case there are large numbers of little im-
ages, as just mentioned, it is with a view to the accommoda-
tion of the women who frequent the temple, each of whom
will take an image, but it must be stolen and not openly carried
off. In case the desired child is born, the woman is expected
to show her gratitude by returning two other images in the
place of that which she stole! Chinese sailors suppose that
the dreaded typhoons of the China seas are caused by malig-! ^j^^jo^j^j. '1
nant spirits, which lie in wait to catch the junks as they navi- j^U^^jc^
gate the dangerous waters. When the storm reaches a pitch
of extreme violence, it is said that it is the habit of the rnari-
304 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
ners to have a paper junk made of the exact pattern of their
' own, and complete in all its details. This paper junk is then
cast into the sea at the point of maximum disturbance, in
order that the angry water-spirits may be deceived into think-
ing that this is the vessel of which they are in quest, and thus
(allow the real one to escape!
The custom prevails in many parts of China, upon occasion
of the spread of some fatal epidemic like cholera, at the be-
ginning of the sixth or seventh moon to hold a New- Year's
celebration. This is with a view to deceiving the god of the
pestilence, who will be surprised to find that he is wrong in
his calculations as to the time of year, and will depart, allow-
ing the plague to cease. This practice is so well understood
that the phrase " autumnal second month " is understood to
be a periphrasis for " never." Another method of hoodwink-
ing a divinity is for a man to creep under a table upon which
are placed offerings, and to put his head through a round
hole made for that purpose. The god will think that this is a
genuine case of offering a man's head in sacrifice, and will act
accordingly. The man will withdraw his head, and enjoy his
well-earned felicity.
In one case of which we happened to be cognisant, where a
village decided to remove the gods from a temple and use it
for a schoolhouse, they had hoped to pay a considerable pro-
portion of the expenses of the alterations by the " silver " to
be extracted from the hearts of the late gods. But the simple-
minded rustics were not familiar with the ways of Chinese
gods and of those who make them, who are like unto them ;
for when they came to search for the precious hearts they
were not found right, but consisted simply of lumps of pew-
ter! Cases no doubt occur in which the priests do conceal
treasures in the images of their gods, and they are matched
by corresponding cases in which the temples are robbed, and
the gods either carried off bodily or pulverised on the spot
POLYTHEISM, PANTHEISM, ATHEISM 305
Violent treatment of Chinese divinities on the part of those
who might be expected to worship them, is by no means un-
known. We have heard of an instance in which a District
Magistrate tried a case which involved a priest, and by im-
plication the Buddha which was the occupant of the temple.
This god was summoned to appear before the magistrate and
told to kneel, which he failed to do, whereupon the magistrate
ordered him to be beaten five hundred blows, by which time
the god was reduced to a heap of dust, and judgment was
pronounced against him by default.
Nearly every year petitions are incessantly put up to the
rain-god to exert his powers on the parched earth, which can-
not be planted until there is a rainfall. After prayers have
been long continued with no result, it is common for the
villagers to administer a little wholesome correction by drag-
ging the image of the god of war out of his temple and setting
him down in the hottest place to be found, that he may know
what the condition of the atmosphere really is at first hand,
and not by hearsay only. The habit of exhibiting undisguised
dissatisfaction with the behaviour of the gods is referred to
in the current saying, " If you do not mend the roof of your
house in the third or fourth moon, you will be reviling the god
of floods in the fifth moon or the sixth."
We have heard of an instance in which the people of a
large city in China, having been visited by an epidemic of
great severity, decided that this was owing to the malevolent
influence of a particular divinity of the district. Banding
themselves together precisely as if the god were a Hving bully,
they set upon him and reduced him to his original elements.
Of the accuracy of this narrative we have no proofs except
its currency, but that appears to be sufficient in itself. The
whole proceeding is not inconsistent with the Chinese notions
about gods and spirits.
In view of facts such as those to which we have been
3o6
CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
U »
directing the reader's attention, it might be most natural for
one who was not familiar with the Chinese character, to draw
the inference that it cannot be possible that the Chinese
have any religion at all. This statement has indeed been
often made in explicit language. In Mr. Meadows' work on
" The Chinese and Their Rebellions," he quotes some of the
too sweeping generalisations of M. Hue only to denounce
them, affirming them to be " baseless calumny of the higher
life of a great portion of the human race." Mr. Meadows
is ready enough to admit that the Chinese are not attracted
either to the bare results of centuries of doctrinal disputes or
to the conduct of the nations which accept those results as
their creed, but emphatically denies the assertion that the
Chinese have " no longing for immortality, no cordial admira-
tion of what is good and great, no unswerving and unshrinking
devotion to those who have been good and great, no craving,
no yearning of the soul to reverence something high and holy."
Sir Thomas Wade, on the other hand, whose long familiarity
with China and the Chinese might be supposed to entitle him
to speak with authority on so plain a question as whether the
Chinese have or have not a religion, has recently published
his opinion as follows : " If religion is held to mean more than
mere ethics, I deny that the Chinese have a religion. They
have indeed a cult, or rather a mixture of cults, but no creed ;
innumerable varieties of puerile idolatry, at which they are
I ready enough to laugh, but which they dare not disregard."
Into the interesting and by no means easily answered ques-
tion here raised we do not feel required to enter. It would
be easy to discuss it at great length, but we are not certain
that any light would be thrown upon it. In our view there is
a practical method of approaching the matter, which will serve
' our purpose much better than abstract discussion. Taoism
and Buddhism have greatly affected the Chinese, but the
Chinese are not Taoists as such, neither are they Buddhists.
POLYTHEISM, PANTHEISM, ATHEISM 307
They are Confucianists, and whatever may be added to their [ ^^^^^y^
faith, or whatever may be taken away by the other systems of |.v*</^y ' ^
thought, the Chinese always remain Confucianists. We shall
close by endeavouring to show in what respects ConfucianismX
/comes short of being a religion such as the Chinese ought to )
[ have. In order to do this, we shall quote the language of a
distinguished Chinese scholar, whose conclusions cannot be
hghtly set aside.
At the end of his " Systematical Digest of the Doctrines of
Confucius," Dr. Ernst Faber devotes a section to The Defects
and Errors of Confucianism, which are set forth, while at the
same time it is acknowledged that there is in Confucianism
much that is excellent concerning the relations of man, and
many points in which the doctrines of Christian revelation are
almost echoed. We quote the fom"-and-twenty points speci-
fied, adding here and there a few words of comment.
1. "Confucianism recognises no relation to a living god."
2. "There is no distinction made between the human soul/ ^ Lvvju/a.-
and the body, nor is there any clear definition of man, either' ^V'^^
from a physical or from a physiological point of view."
The absence of any clear doctrine as to the soul of man is
very perplexing to the foreign student of Confucianism. The
ultimate outcome of its teaching, in the case of many of the
common people, is that they know nothing about any soul at •• /5 ' /-
all, except in the sense of animal vitality. When a man dies, ( 4-r-*-*-''^
there is classical authority for the statement that his " soul " ., ' a
goes upwards towards heaven, and his " animal soul " goes ( C'-'^""*''''*''^^*'
into the earth. But a simpler theory is that so constantly
advanced, and which is entirely harmonious with the agnostic
materialism of the tnie Confucianist, that " the soul " or breath
dissolves into the air, and the flesh into the dust. It is fre-
quently quite impossible to interest a Chinese in the question
whether he has three souls, one soul, or no soul at all. To
him the elucidation of such a matter is invested with the same
3o8 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
ikind and degree of interest which he would feel in learning
'^'^ which particular muscles of the body produce the movement
of the organ concerned in eating. As long as the process is
allowed to go on with comfort, he does not care in the smallest
j degree by what name the anatomist designates the muscular
fibres which assist the result. In hke manner, as long as the
Chinese has enough to do to look after the interest of his
digestive apparatus, and that of those who are dependent
upon him, he is very likely to care nothing either about his
" souls " (if he has any) or about theirs, unless it can be shown
,«/^ that the mailer is in some way connected with the price of
1 grain.
3. " There is no explanation given why it is that some men
are born as saints, others as ordinary mortals."
4. " All men are said to possess the disposition and strength
necessary for the attainment of moral perfection, but the con- '
trast with the actual state remains unexplained."
, 5. " There is wanting in Confucianism a decided and serious
' tone in its treatment of the doctrine of sin, for, with the
exception of moral retribution in social life, it mentions no
V '\, punishment for sin."
\^ 6. " Confucianism is generally devoid of a deeper insight
into si'n and evil."
7. " Confucianism finds it therefore impossible to explain
death."
r^ ^ f 8. " Confucianism knows no mediator, none that could
^^ 1 restore original natiure in accordance with the ideal which man
\ finds in himself."
9. " Prayer and its ethical power find no place in the sys-
tem of Confucius."
I o. " Though confidence is indeed frequently insisted upon,
its presupposition, truthfulness in speaking, is never practically
urged, but rather the reverse."
II. " Polygamy is presupposed and tolerated."
POLYTHEISM, PANTHEISM. ATHEISM zog
1 2. " Polytheism is sanctioned." i , ,^/
13. " Fortune-telling, choosing of days, omens, dreams, and' ^^ ^"^
other illusions (phcenixes, etc.) are believed in." ' ^■^•-^"'
14. "Ethics are confounded with external ceremonies, and _ ^ * '''
a precise despotic political form." 3>J^^-^^^
1 5. " The position which Confucius assimaed towards an- ■ ttyja-iA-*^
cient institutions is a capricious one."
16. "The assertion that certain musical melodies influence f
the morals of the people is ridiculous." ' j,^
17. "The influence of mere good example is exaggerated, ] y^^^^'^ \
and Confucius himself proves it most of all." '
If it be true, as Confucian ethics claim, that the prince is
the vessel as the people are the water; that when the cup is
round the water will be round, and when the dish is flat the
water will be flat — it seems hard to explain how the great men
of China have not exerted a stronger influence in the way of
modifying the character of those who study their hves. If
example is really so powerful as Confucianists represent, how
does it happen that as seen in its effects it is so comparatively , —
inert? The virtual deification of the "superior man," 3-s / ^^itjC^-*-^ *
mentioned below under No. 20, is matched by the entire ab-l
sence of any mediator, as already pointed out under No. 8.
No matter how " superior " the sage may be, he is obliged to
confine himself to giving good ad\nce. If the advice is not
taken, he not only cannot help it, but there is no further
advice given.
To us that has always appeared to be a singularly suggest-
ive passage in which Confucius said : " I do not open up the
truth to one who is not eager to get knowledge, nor help out
any one who is not anxious to explain himself. When I have
presented one comer of a subject to any one, and he cannot
from it learn the other three, I do not repeat the lesson." The
advice which he gives is for superior men only. Such advice is
excellent, but it is by no means a prophylactic. When it has
Voa
\J\
310 CHINESE CH/IRACTERISTICS
failed to act as such, then what is wanted is a restorative. It
is idle to stand over the traveller who, having fallen among
thieves, is stripped and wounded, and to discourse to him of
the importance of joining friendly caravans, of the unadvisa-
bility of sustaining serious lesions of the tissues, by which
much blood is likely to be lost and the nervous centres injured.
The wounded man, already faint from loss of blood, knows
all that ; indeed, he knew it all the while. What he needs
now is not retrospective lectures on the consequences of vio-
lating natural laws, but oil, wine, a place of refuge for a pos-
sible recovery, and above all, a wise and helpful friend. For
the physically disabled, Confucianism may at times do some-
. y-^s^ I thing ; for the morally and spiritually wounded it does and
can do nothing.
I 18. "In Confucianism the system of social life is tyranny.
•^ \ Women are slaves. Children have no rights in relation to
their parents, whilst subjects are placed in the position of
* children with regard to their superiors."
(' 19. " Filial piety is exaggerated into deification of parents."
w JU %^ y 20. "The net result of Confucius' system, as drawn by him-
I self, is the worship of genius, i.e., deification of man."
^ ^21." There is, with the exception of ancestral worship, which
-J is void of any true ethical value, no clear conception of the
'v-^ dogma of immortality."
22. "All rewards are expected in this world, so that egotism
^,p^^ is unconsciously fostered, and if not avarice at least ambition."
.' ' ^^ . r 23. " The whole system of Confucianism offers no comfort
Jf^ y ^ \tp ordinary mortals, either in life or in death."
5(J~^ 24. "The history of China shows that Confucianism is in-
^ I capable of effecting for the people a new birth to a higher life
' and nobler efforts, and Confucianism is now in practical life
^ quite alloyed with Shamanistic and Buddhistic ideas and
practices."
Of the strange intermixtiu-e of different forms of faith in
POLYTHEISM, P/iNTHElSM, ATHEISM 31^
China we have akeady spoken. That neither Confucianism
nor either of its co-religions is capable of " effecting for the
people a new birth to a higher life and nobler efforts " is well
recognised by the Chinese themselves. This is strikingly
shown in one of their fables, the literary authorship of which
we have not ascertained.
According to this account, Confucius, Laotze, and Buddha
met one day in the land of the Immortals, and were lamenting
the fact that in those degenerate times their excellent doctrines
did not seem to make any headway in the Central Empire.
After prolonged discussion, it was agreed that the reason must
be that while the doctrines themselves are recognised as admi-
rable, human nature is inadequate to live up to them without
a constant model. It was accordingly decided that each of
the founders of these schools of instruction should materiahse '•■
himself, go down to earth, and try to find some one who
could do what it was so necessary to have done. This plan
was at once carried into effect, and in process of time, while
wandering about the earth, Confucius came on an old man of
venerable appearance, who, however, did not rise at the ap-
proach of the sage, but inviting the latter to be seated, en-
gaged him in a conversation on the doctrines of antiquity and
the degree to which they were at that time neglected and
practised. In his discourse the old man showed such pro-
found acquaintance with the tenets of the ancients, and dis-
played such vast penetration of judgment, that Confucius was
greatly delighted, and after a long interview retired. But
even when the sage took his leave, the old man did not rise.
Having found Laotze and Buddha, who had been altogether
unsuccessful in their search, Confucius related to them his
adventure, and recommended that each of them should in
turn visit the sitting philosopher, and ascertain whether he
was as well versed in their doctrines as in those of Confucius.
To his unmixed dehght, Laotze found the old man to be
312 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
almost as familiar with the tenets of Taoism as its founder,
and a model of eloquence and fervour. Like Confucius,
Laotze was struck by the fact that although maintaining a
most respectful attitude, the old man did not rise from his
place. It was now the turn of Buddha, who met with the
same surprising and gratifying success. The old man still did
not rise, but he exhibited an insight into the inner meaning of
Buddhism such as not had been seen for ages.
When the three founders of religion met to consult, they
were unanimously of the opinion that this rare and astonishing
old man was the very one, not only to recommend each of
the " three religions," but also to demonstrate that " the three
religions are really one." Accordingly they all three once
more presented themselves before the old man in company
with each other. They explained the object of their previous
visits, and the lofty hopes which the old man's wisdom had
excited, that through him all three religions might be revived,
and at last reduced to practice. The old man, still seated,
listened respectfully and attentively, and replied as follows:
" Venerable sages, your benevolence is high as heaven and
deep as the seas. Your plan is admirably profound in its
wisdom. But you have made an unfortunate selection in the
agent through whom you wish to accomplish this mighty re-
form. It is true that I have looked into the books of Reason
and of the Law, and into the Classics. It is also true that I
have a partial perception of their sublimity and unity. But
there is one circumstance of which you have not taken ac-
count. Perhaps you are not aware of it. It is only from my
waist upward that I am a man ; below that point I am made
of stone. My forte is to discuss the duties of men from all the
various points of view, but I am so unfortunately constituted
I that I can never reduce any of them to practice." Confucius,
Laotze, and Buddha sighed deeply, and vanished from the
earth, and since that day no effort has been made to find a
POLYTHEISM, PANTHEISM, ATHEISM 3^3
mortal who is able to exhibit in his life the teachings of the
three religions.
A comparison has often been made between the condition
of China at the present time, and that of the Roman Empire
during the first century of our era. That the moral state of
China now is far higher than that of the Roman Empire then, r fyjiCt^c/-'^'^
scarcely admits of a rational doubt, but in China, as in Rome, . ^
religious faith has reached the point of decay. Of China it t
might be said, as Gibbon remarked of Rome, that to the com-
mon people all religions are egualljMriie, to the philosopher
all are e^ually^ false, and to the magistrate all are equally use-(
JM. Of the Emperor of China, as of the Roman Emperor, it
might be affirmed that he is " at once a high-priest, an atheist,
and a god "! To such a state has Confucianism, mixed with'
polytheism and pantheism, brought the Empire. -'
It has been well said that there is one thing which is worse
than pure atheism, and that is entire indifference as to whether
atheism is true. In China polytheism and atheism are but
opposite facets of the same die, and are more or less con-
sciously held for true by multitudes of educated Chinese, and
with no sense of contradiction. Its absolute indifference to ( /A*^^cjf-0/\fc
the profoundest spiritual truths in the nature of man is thel . '' * - /
most melancholy characteristic of the Chinese mind, its ready' /'•^^^^'^
^acceptance of a body without a soul, of a soul without a spirit)
of a spirit without a hfe, of a cosmos without a cause, a Uni^
verse without a God.
a«^?-
THE REAL CONDITION OF CHINA AND HER PRESENT NEEDS.
THE Confucian Classics are the chart by which the rulers
of China have endeavoured to navigate the ship of state.
It is the best chart ever constructed by man, and perhaps it is
not too much to say, with the late Dr. Williams,* Dr. Legge,
and others, that its authors may have had in some sense a
divine guidance. With what success the Chinese have navi-
gated their craft, into what waters they have sailed, and in
what direction they are at present steering — these are ques-
tions of capital importance now that China is coming into
intimate relations with so many Western states, and seems
likely in the future to exert an influence increasingly great.
It has been said that " there are six indications of the moral
life of a community, any one of which is significant; when
they all agree in their testimony they afford an infallible test
of its true character. These are : (i) the condition of industry ;
(2) the social habits ; (3) the position of woman and the char-
acter of the family ; (4) the organisation of government and
the character of the rulers ; (5) the state of public education ;
(6) the practical bearing of religious worship on actual life,"
In the discussion of the various characteristics of the Chi-
nese which have attracted our notice, each of the foregoing
points has been incidentally illustrated, albeit incompletely and
without that observance of proportion necessary in a full treat-
ment of these topics. In a survey of the Chinese character
the field of view is so extensive that many subjects must be
314
THE REAL CONDITIUN OF CHINA 3^5
passed by altogether. The characteristics which have been
selected are intended merely as points through which lines
may be drawn to aid in outlining the whole. There are many
additional " characteristics " which ought to be included in a
full presentation of the Chinese as they are.
The greater part of the illustrative incidents which have
been already cited in exemplification of various " character-
istics" of the Chinese have been mentioned because they
appeared upon examination to be typical. They are like
bones of a skeleton, which must be fitted into their place be-
fore the whole structure can be seen. It will not do to ignore
them, unless perhaps it can be shown that they are not bones
at all, but merely plaster-of- Paris imitations. It may indeed
be objected that the true place of each separate bone has been
mistaken, and that others which are important modifiers of
the total result have not been adjusted to their proper places.
This criticism, which is a perfectly just one, we not only admit
but expressly affirm, declaring that it is not possible to gain a
complete idea of the Chinese from selected " characteristics,"
any more than it is possible to gain a correct idea of a human
countenance from descriptive essays on its eyes, its nose, or its
chin. But at the same time we must remind the reader that
the judgments expressed have not been hastily formed, that
they are based upon a mass of observations far in excess of
what has been referred to, and that in many cases the opin-
ions might have been made indefinitely stronger, and still
have been fully warranted by the facts. These facts are as
patent to one who comes within their range as a North China
dust-storm, which fills the eyes, the ears, the nostrils, the hair,
and the clothing with an almost impalpable powder, often
surcharging the atmosphere with electricity, and sometimes
rendering lamps necessary at noonday. One may be very
wrong in his theory of the causes of this phenomenon, but
altogether right in his description of it. But there is this im-
31 6 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
portant difference between the observation of physical and of
moral phenomena : the former force themselves on the atten-
tion of every human being, while the latter are perceived only
by those whose opportunities are favourable, and whose facul-
ties are directed towards the things that are to be seen.
The truth is that the phenomena of Chinese life are of a
contradictory character, and whoever looks upon one face of
the shield, ignoring the other, will infallibly judge erroneously,
and yet will never come to a perception of the fact that he is
wrong. The union of two apparently irreconcilable views in
one concept is not an easy task, but it is often a very neces-
sary one, and nowhere is it more necessary than in China,
where it is so difficult to see even one side completely, not to
speak of both.
Of the lofty moral quality of Confucianism we have already
spoken. That it produces many individuals possessing a high
^ moral character we are prepared to believe. That is what
ought to be expected from so excellent a system of morals.
But does it produce such characters on any considerable scale,
( and with any approach to uniformity ? The real character of
A any human being can be discovered by answering three ques-
tions : What is his relation to himself ? What is his relation
/^ to his fellow-men ? What is his relation to the object of his
worship ? Through these three fixed points the circle defining
his true position may be drawn. Those who may have fol-
lowed us thus far know already what replies we find in the
Chinese of to-day to these test questions. His relations both
to himself and to others are marked by an absence of sincer-
ity, and his relations to others by an absence of altruism ; his
relations to the objects of his worship are those of a polythe-
1^ ist, a pantheist, and an agnostic.
What the Chinese lack is not intellectual ability. It is not
patience, practicality, nor cheerfulness, for in all these quali-
ties they greatly excel. What they do lack is Character and
,c>^"
THE RE/tL CONDITION OF CHINA 31?
Conscience. Some Chinese officials cannot be tempted by Q.^^^'x^JJC/^
any bribe, and refuse to commit a wrong that will never be
found out, because " Heaven knows, earth knows, you know,
and I know." But how many Chinese could be found who
would resist the pressure brought upon them to recommend
for employment a relative who was known to be incompetent ?
Imagine for a moment the domestic conseguences of such resist-
ance, and is it strange that any Chinese should dread to face
them ? But what Chinese would ever think of carrying theo-
retical morals into such a region as that ? When it is seen
what a part parasitism and nepotism play in the administration
of China, civil, military, and commercial, is it any wonder that
Chinese gate-keepers and constables are not to be depended
upon for the honest performance of their duties ?
He who wishes to learn the truth about the moral_ condition
of the Chinese can do so by the aid of the Chinese themselves,
who, however ready to cover their own shortcomings and
those of their friends, are often singularly frank in confessing
the weak points in the national character. Some of these
descriptions of the Chinese by other Chinese have often served
to us as reminders of a conversation upon which Carlyle
dwells with evident enjoyment, in one of the volumes of his
" Life of Frederick the Great." That monarch had a school-
inspector, of whom he was rather fond, and with whom he
liked to talk a httle. " Well, M. Sulzer, how do your schools
get on ? " asked the King one day. " How goes our educa-
tion business ? " " Surely, not ill, your Majesty, and much i
better in late years," answered Sulzer. " In late years, why? " K
" Well, your Majesty, in former times, the notion being that *
mankind were naturally inclined to evil, a system of severity
prevailed in schools ; but now, when we recognise that the in-
born inclination of men is rather to good than to evil, school-
masters have adopted a more generous procedure." " Incli-
nation rather to good ! " said Frederick, shaking his old head,
31^ CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
with a sad smile. " Alas, dear Sulzer, I see you don't know\
I that damned race of creatures." {Er kennt nicht diesever-J
\dammte Race.) ^
Chinese society resembles some of the scenery in China.
At a httle distance it appears fair and attractive. Upon a
nearer approach, however, there is invariably much that is
shabby and repulsive, and the air is full of odours which are
not fragrant. No photograph does justice to Chinese scenery,
for though photography has been described as "justice with-
out mercy," this is not true of Chinese photography, in which
the dirt and the smells are omitted.
There is no country in the world where the symbol denoting
happiness is so constantly before the eye as in China. But it
, requires no long experience to discover that it is a true obser-
\^^ vation that Chinese happiness is all on the outside. We beHevQ
it to be a criticism substantially just that there are no homes)
in Asia. ' — '
In contemplating the theory of Chinese society, and the
way in which that theory is reduced to fact, we are often re-
minded of those stone tablets to be seen at the spot where the
principal highways cross streams. The object of these tablets
is to preserve in " everlasting remembrance " the names of
those by whom the bridges were erected and repaired. Some-
times there are half a dozen such stones in immediate prox-
imity, in various stages of decay. We are much interested in
these memorials of former dynasties and of ages long gone
by, and inquire for the bridge the building of which they
commemorate. " Oh, that," we are told, " disappeared gener-
ations ago — no one knows when ! "
A few years ago the writer was travelling on the Grand
Canal, when a head-wind prevented further progress. Stroll-
ing along the bank, we found the peasants busily engaged in
planting their fields. It was May, and the appearance of the
country was one of great beauty. Any traveller might have
o
r
THE REAL CONDITION OF CHINA 3^9
admired the minute and untiring industry which cultivated
such wide areas as if they were gardens. But a short conver-
sation with these same peasants brought to hght the fact that ,
the winter had been to them a time of bitter severity. Floods , ip^uv-^-cA^^""-"^
and drought having in the previous year destroyed the crops, '
in every village around people had starved to death — nay,'
were at that moment starving. The magistrates had given a
httle rehef, but it was inadequate, sporadic, and subject to
shameful peculations, against which the poor people had no
protection and for which there was no redress. Yet nothing
of all this appeared upon the surface. Elsewhere the year had
been a prosperous one, the harvests abundant and the people
content. No memorial in the Peking Gazette, no news item
in the foreign journals published in China, had taken account
of the facts. But ignorance of these facts on the part of
others certainly had no tendency to alter the facts themselves.
The people of the district continued to starve, whether other
people knew it or not. Even the flat denial of the facts would
not prove an adequate measure of relief. A priori reason-^
ing as to what the Chinese ought to be is one thing ; carefuly
observation of what they actually are is quite another. ^
That many of the evils in Chinese society the existence of
which we have pointed out are also to be found in Western
"nominally Christian lands," we are perfectly aware. Per-
haps the reader may have been disappointed not to find a
more definite recognition of this fact, and some systematic \
attempt at comparison and contrast. Such a procedure was
in contemplation, but it had to be given up. The writer's
acquaintance with any Western country except his own is of
an altogether too limited and inadequate character to justify
the undertaking, which must for other reasons have failed.
Let each reader make his own running comparisons as he
proceeds, freeing himself as far as he may be able from " the
bias of patriotism," and always giving the Chinese the benefit
320
CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
'«.-/»'
.^
,rj>H^
.^
\r
of the doubt. After such a comparison shall have been made,
the very lowest result which we should expect would be the
ascertained fact that the face of every Western land is towards
the dawning morning of the future, while the face of China
is always and everywhere towards the darkness of the remote
past. A most pregnant fact, if it is a fact, and one which we
1 beg the reader to ponder well ; for how came it about?
The needs of China, let us repeat, are few. They are only
Character and Conscience. Nay, they are but one, for Con-
science is Character. It was said of a famous maker of pianos
that he was " like his own instruments — square, upright, and
grand." Does one ever meet any such characters in China?
At the close of the biography of one of the literary men of
England, who died but a few years ago, occurs the following
passage, written by his wife : " The outside world must judge
him as an author, a preacher, a member of society ; but they
only who lived with him in the intimacy of everyday life at
home can tell what he was as a man. Over the real romance
of his hfe, and over the tenderest, loveliest passages in his
private letters, a veil must be thrown ; but it will not be lifting
it too far to say, that if in the highest, closest of earthly rela-
tionships, a love that never failed — pure, passionate, for six-
and-thirty years — a love which never stooped from its own
lofty level to a hasty word, an impatient gestiure, or a selfish
act, in sickness or in health, in sunshine or in storm, by day
or by night, could prove that the age of chivalry has not
passed away forever, Charles Kingsley fulfilled the ideal of a
* most true and perfect knight to the one woman blest with
that love in time and to eternity." „.,,^^
/T' The fairest fruit of Christian civilisation is in the beautiful A
V lives which it produces. They are not rare. Hundreds of )
•Vrecords of such lives have been produced within the present/
generation, and there are thousands upon thousands of such
lives of which no public record ever appears. Every reader
\_v>*-*
THE RE/tL CONDITION OF CHINA 321
must have known of at least one such life of single-hearted
devotion to the good of others, and some have been privileged
to know many such, within the range of their own experience.
How are these hves to be accounted for, and whence do they]
draw their inspiration ? We have no wish to be unduly scepy
tical, but after repeated and prolonged consideration of the
subject, it is our deliberate conviction that if the forces which
make the hves of the Chinese what they are were to produce
one such character as Mrs. Kingsley represents her husband
to have been, that would be a moral miracle greater than any
or all that are recorded in the books of Taoist fables. No
hvunan institution can escape from the law, inexorable because
.^ixine : I " By their fruits ye shall know them." The forces of ^VvrCA
Confucianism have had an abundant time in which to work
out their ultimate results. We believe that they have long '^'^■^^ ^
since done all .that they are capable of doing, and that from JL /«/^ ^^
pjhem there is no, further fruit to be expected. They ha^l y''*^
I achieved all that man alone can do, and more than he has\
Vdone in any other land, under any other conditions. Ancr
after a patient survey of all that China has to offer, the most
friendly critic is compelled, reluctantly and sadly, to coincide
in the verdict, " The answer to Confucianism is China."
Three mutually inconsistent theories are held in regard to
reform in China. First, that it is unnecessary. This is no
doubt the view of some of the Chinese themselves, though by
no means of all Chinese. It is also the opinion adopted by
certain foreigners, who look at China and the Chinese through
the mirage of distance. Second, tliat reform is impossible.
This pessimistic conclusion is arrived at by many who have
had too much occasion to know the tremendous obstacles
which any permanent and real reform must encounter, before
it can even be tried. To such persons, the thorough reforma-
tion of so vast a body as the Chinese people appears to be a
task as hopeless as the galvanising into Ufe of an Egyptian
,rU/l^(PrV"
322 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
mummy. To us, the second of these views appears only less
unreasonable than the first ; but if what has been already said
fails to make this evident, nothing that could here be added
would be sufficient to do so.
To those who are agreed that reform in China is both
necessary and possible, the question by what agency that re-
form is to be brought about is an important one, and it is not
surprising that there are several different and inharmonious
replies.
At the very outset, we have to face the inquiry. Can China
be reformed from within herself? That she can be thus re-
formed is taken for granted by those of her statesmen who
are able to perceive the vital need of reformation. An in-
stance of this assumption occurred in a recent memorial in the
Peking Gazette, in which the writer complained of the inhab-
itants of one of the central provinces as turbulent, and stated
that a certain number of competent persons had been ap-
pointed to go through the province, to explain to the peo-
ple the maxims of the Sacred Edicts of K'ang Hsi, by which
vigorous measure it was apparently expected that the char-
acter of the population would in time be ameliorated. This
explanation of moral maxims to the people (originally an imi-
tation of Christian preaching) is a favourite prescription for the
amendment of the morals of the time, in spite of the barren-
ness of results. When it fails, as it always does, there is noth-
ing to be done but to try it over again. That it must fail, is
shown by the longest experience, with every modification of
circumstances except in the results, which are as nearly as
possible uniformly nil. This has been sufficiently shown
already in the instructive allegory of the eloquent old man
whose limbs were stone.
But if mere precept is inert, it might be expected that
example would be more efficient. This topic has also been
previously discussed, and we need recur to it only to point
THE RE/iL CONDITION OF CHINA 323
out the reason why in the end the best examples always fail
to produce the intended results. It is because they have no
power to propagate the impulse which gave them Ufe. Take,
for instance, the case of Chang Chih-tung, formerly Governor
of Shansi, where he is reported to have made the most vigor-
ous efforts to put a stop to the practice of opium-smoking
among the officials, and opium-raising among the people.
How many of his subordinates would honestly co-operate in
this effort, and what could possibly be effected without such
co-operation ? Every foreigner is compelled to recognise his
own comparative helplessness in Chinese matters when the
intermediaries through whom alone he can act are not in sym-
pathy with his plans for reform. But if a foreigner is com-
paratively helpless, a Chinese, no matter what his rank, is not
less so. The utmost that can be expected is that when his
purpose is seen to be inflexibly fixed, the incorruptible official
will carry everything before him (so far as external appear-
ances go), as a cat clears an attic of rats, while the cat is there.
But the moment the official is removed, almost before he has
fairly gone, the rats are back at their work, and everything
goes on as before.
That a Chinese statesman should cherish hopes of person-
ally reforming his country is not only creditable to him, but
perfectly natural, for he is cognisant of no other way than the
one which we have described. An intelligent British official,
who knows " the terrible vis inertics of Oriental apathy and
fatalism — that dumb stupidity against which Schiller says even
the gods are powerless " — and who knows what is involved in
permanent "reform," would have been able to predict the
result with infallible precision. In referring to certain abuses
in southwest China, connected with the production of copper,
Mr. Baber remarks: "Before the mines can be adequately
worked, Yunnan must be peopled, the Lolos must be fairly
treated, roads must be constructed, the faciUties offered for
324 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
navigation by the upper Yang-tse must be improved — in short,
China must be civilised, A thousand years would be too short a
period to allow of such a consummation, unless some force from
without should accelerate the impulse." * T<? attempt to reform
China without , some force from without,"} is hke trying to
build a ship in the sea ; all the laws of aii^and water conspire
to make it impossible. It is a principle of mechanics that a
force that begins and ends in a machine has no power to
move it.
Between Tientsin and Peking there is a bend in the Peiho,
where the traveller sees half of a ruined temple standing on
the brink of the bank. The other half has been washed
* These significant words of the late Mr. Baber have recently received
a striking confirmation from a memorial in the Peking Gazette of August,
1890, from T'ang Chiung, Director of Mines in Yunnan, who makes a
report in regard to the condition of the works and the output. He states
that " a great deal of illicit mining is carried on by the people, and the
officials are afraid of the consequences of asserting their rights despoti-
cally. A plan has, however, been devised of buying up the copper pri-
vately mined by the natives at a low price, and thus taking advantage of
the extra labour by a measure at once profitable and popular. In this
way the memorialist thinks the mines will work well, and will give no
excuse for the intrusion of outsiders." The rescript merely orders the
Board of Revenue to " take note."
In a postscript memorial the Director informs the Emperor that ten
thousand catties of copper are bought monthly from the illicit workers of
the private mines, and that the labourers " are not paid wages, but are
supplied with oil and rice." In conclusion he " describes the whole state
of the mines as highly satisfactory."
It is not every day that an official of the rank of governor officially in-
forms an Emperor that the laws of his Empire are constantly and deliber-
ately violated by large numbers of persons with whom the magistrates
dare not interfere, but whom, on the other hand, they mollify with oil,
rice, and a sum of money sufficient to induce them to part with their stolen
copper ; and that in consequence of this defiance of the Emperor and his
officials, the condition of the Emperor's mines is " highly satisfactory."
No wonder the Board of Revenue was invited to " take note "!
THE REAL CONDITION OF CHINA 325
away. Just below is an elaborate barrier against the water,
composed of bundles of reeds tied to stakes. Half of this has
been carried away by the floods. The gods stand exposed
to the storms, the land hes exposed to inundation, the river is
half silted up, a melancholy type of the condition of the Em-
pire. There is classical authority for the dictum that "rotten
wood cannot be carved." It must be wholly cut away, and
new material grafted upon the old stock. China can never be k^ Ci-'\Z
reformed from within.
It is not long since the idea was widely entertained in the
lands of the West that China was to be regenerated by being
brought into "the sisterhood of nations." The process by
which she was introduced into that " sisterhood " was not in-
deed such as to give rise to any well-founded hopes of national
regeneration as a consequence. And now that the leading
nations have had their several representatives at Peking for
more than thirty years, what beneficial effect has their presence
had upon the evils from which China suffers ? The melan- , ; ^ ^^
choly truth is that the international relations of the great ,
powers are precisely those in which they appear to the least ^'
advantage. The Chinese are keen observers ; what have they
perceived in the conduct of any one of the states of the West
to lead to the conviction that those states are actuated by
motives more elevated than those which actuate the Empire
which they wish to " reform " ? And now that China is her-
self becoming a " power," she has her hands fully occupied in
playing off one set of foreign interests against another, without
taking lessons of those who are much more concerned in
'jexploiting " China than in teaching^ her morals. If China is
to be reformed, it will not be done by diplomacy.
There are not wanting those who are firmly persuaded that
what is needed by China is not merely admission into the
family of nations, but unrestricted intercourse, free trade, and
the btpthgrhood of man. The gospel of commerce is th«
326 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
panacea for China's needs ; more ports, more imports, a lower
tariff, and no transit taxes. Perhaps we do not hear so much
of this now as two or three decades ago, during which time
the Chinese have penetrated more fully than before into Aus-
tralia and the United States, with results not alw3,ys most
favourable taJ' unrestricted intercoiu"se " and the (" brother-
hood of man." Have there not also been loud whispers that
Chinese tea ahd Chinese straw-braid have been defective in
some desirable qualities, and has not this lack been partly
matched by defects in certain articles imported into China
from the lands of the West?
As an auxiliary of civilisation, commerce is invaluable, but
it is not by itself an instrument of reform. Adam Smith, the
f great apostle of ^odern political economy, defined man as " a
trading animal "i no two dogs, he says, exchange bones. But
supposing they did so, and supposing that in every great city
the canine population were to establish a bone exchange, what
would be the inevitable effect upon the character of the dogs?
The great trading nations of antiquity were not the best na-
tions, but the worst. That the same is not true of their mod-
ern successors is certainly not due to their trade, but to wholly
different causes. It has been well said that commerce, like
Christianity, is ^cosmical in its aim ; but commerce, like the
rainbow, always bends towards the pot of gold.
It is sufficient to point to the continent of Africa, with its
rum and its slave traffic, each introduced by trading and by
Christian nations, and each an unspeakable curse, to show
that, taken by itself, there is no reformatory influence in com-
merce.
There are many friends of China well acquainted with her
condition, whose prescription is more comprehensive than any
of those which we have named. In their view, China needs
\ Western .xiilture, Western _science, and what Mr, Meadows
called " funded civilisation." *The Chinese have been a cul-
THE REAL CONDITION OF CHINA 327
tured nation for millenniums. They had already been civilised
for ages when our ancestors were rooting in the primeval for-
ests. In China, if anywhere on the globe, that recipe has
been faithfully tried. There is in culture as such nothing of . A
a reformatory nature, f Culture is selfish.j Its conscious or C^-'^vA^-^
unconscious motto is, " I, rather than you. As we daily per-
ceive in China, where our boasted culture is scouted, there is
no scorn like intellectual scorn. If Chinese culture has been
unable to exert a due restraining influence upon those who
have been so thoroughly steeped in it, is it probable that this ^v. '\
result will be attained by a foreign exotic ? v . '
Of science the Chinese are unquestionably in the greatest ( ^^C-'^-^^""''*''^
jUSjedi They need every modem science for the development ;
of the still latent resources of their mighty Empire. This they
are themselves beginning clearly to perceive, and will perceive
/^still more clearly in the immediate futiu-e. But is it certainX
I that an acquaintance with science will exert an advantageous I
I moral influence over the Empire ? What is the process by
"which this is to take place ? No science lies nearer to our
modern advancement than chemistry. Would the spread of
a general knowledge of chemistry in China, therefore, be a
moral agency for regenerating the people? Would it not
rather introduce new and unthought-of possibilities of fraud
and violence throughout every department of Hfe ? Would it
be quite safe, Chinese character being what it is, to diffuse
through the Empire, together with an unlimited supply of
chemicals, an exact formula for the preparation of every
variety of modern explosives ?
By " funded civilisation " are meant the material results of
the vast development of Western progress. It includes the
manifold marvels resulting from steam and electricity. This,
we are told, is what China really needs, and it is all that she
needs. Railways from every city to every other city, steam
navigation on her inland waters, a complete postal system,
328 CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
national banks, coined silver, telegraphs and telephones as
nerves of connection — these are to be the visible signs of the
new and happy day for China.
Perhaps this was the half-formed idea of Chang Chih-tung,
when in his memorial on the subject of railways he affirmed
that they will do away with many risks incidental to river
transport, " such as stealing by the crew." Will the accumu-
lation, then, of funded civilization diminish moral evils ? Do
railways ensure honesty in their employes, or even in their
managers ? Have we not read "A Chapter of Erie," showing
how that great highway between states was stolen bodily, the
stockholders helpless, and " nobody to blame " ? And will
they do these things better in China than it has as yet been
possible to be sure of having them done in England or in
America ? Is funded civilisation an original cause by itself,
or is it the effect of a long train of complex causes, working
in slow harmony for great periods of time ? Would the intro-
duction of the ballot-box into China make the Chinese a
democratic people, and fit them for republican rule ? No
more will funded civilisation produce in the Chinese Empire
those conditions which accompany it in the West, unless the
causes which have produced the conditions in the West are
set in motion to produce the like results in China. Those
causes are not material, they are moral.
How is it that with the object-lessons of Hongkong, of
Shanghai and other treaty ports before them, the Chinese
do not introduce " model settlements " into the native cities
of China ? Because they do not wish for such changes, and
would not tolerate them if they were introduced. How is it
that with the object-lesson of an honest administration of the
Imperial Maritime Customs before their eyes for nearly a third
of a century, the government does not adopt such methods
elsewhere ? Because, in the present condition of China, the
adoption of such methods of taxation of Chinese by Chinese
iT®
THE REAL CONDITION OF CHINA ja9
is an absolute moral impossibility. British character and con-
science have been more than a thousand years in attaining
their present development, and they cannot be suddenly taken
up by the Chinese for their own, and set in operation, like a
Knipp gun from Essen, moimted and ready to be discharged.
The forces which have developed character and conscience,
in the Anglo-Saxon race are as definite and as certain facts o£
history as the landing of Juhus Caesar in Britain, or the in-
vasion of William the Conqueror. These forces came with'
Christianity, and they grew with Christianity. In proportion!
as Christianity roots itself in the popular heart these products}
flourish, and not otherwise.
Listen for a moment to the great advocate of culture, Mat-
thew Arnold : " Every educated man loves Greece, owes grat-
itude to Greece. Greece was the lifter-up to the nations of
the banner of art and science, as Israel was the hfter-up of the
banner of righteousness. Now the world cannot do without
art and science. And the lifter-up of the banner of art and
science was naturally much occupied with them, and conduct
was a plain, homely matter. And this brilhant Greece per-
ished for lack of attention to conduct; for want of conduct,
steadiness, character. . . . Nay, and the victorious revelation
now, even now, in this age, when more of beauty and more of
knowledge are so much needed, and knowledge at any rate \
is so highly esteemed — the revelation which rules the world]
even now is not Greece's revelation, but Judaea's; not the
pre-eminence of art and science, but the pre-eminence of]
righteousness."
/^In order to reform China the springs of character must > (^,x^/^^*^
d5 reached and purified, conscience must be practically en-'
throned, and no longer imprisoned in its own palace like the '
long Une of Japanese Mikados. It is a truth well stated by
one of the leading exponents of modem philosophy, that " there
is no alchemy by which to get golden conduct from leaden
330
CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
? c
instincts." What China needs is rfg^t^fflisnpss^ and in order to
attain it, it is absolutely necessary that she have a knowledge
of God and a new conception of man, as well as of the relation
of man to God. She needs a new life in every individual soul,
/ in the family, and in society. The manifold needs of Chinji^
f we find, then, to be a single imperative need. It will be met
A permanently, completely, only by Christian civilisation.
?
GLOSSARY OF TECHNICAL TERMS.
BO Yj a term used by foreigners in China to denote the head-
servant, irrespective of his age.
CA TTY, Si Chinese pound, equal by treaty to one and one-
third pounds avoirdupois.
COMPRADORE, a steward or agent.
FENG-SHU I, Hterally, " wind- water." A comphcated sys-
tem of geomantic superstition, by which the good luck of
sites and buildings is determined.
K'ANG, a raised platform of adobe or of bricks, used as a
bed, and heated by means of flues.
K O TOU, or KOTOW, the act of prostration and striking
the head on the ground in homage or worship.
LI, a Chinese measure of length, three or more of which equal
an English mile.
SQUEEZE, a forced contribution exacted by those through
whose hands the money of others passes.
TAEL, a weight of money equivalent to a sixteenth of a Chi-
nese pound ; an ounce.
TAOTAI, an officer of the third rank, who is intendant of a
circuit.
YAM EN, the office and residence of a Chinese official.
331
INDEX.
Anti-foreign literature in China, 112.
Arnold, Matthew, quoted on Greece, 329.
Baber, Mr., qaoted on belief in the growth of coal, 260.
Chinese copper-mining, 324.
Chinese lack of sympathy, 279.
Chinese truthfulness, 270.
length of the Chinese mile, 52.
reform in China, 323.
Szuchuan farm-houses, 244.
treatment of victims of fever, 206.
Buddhism, Confucianism, and Taoism, 310-312.
influence of, on the practice of virtue, 186.
introduction of, into China, 119.
spares animal life, 136.
Buddhists and Taoists, number of, in China, 294.
Burying alive in China, 211-213.
Callery, M., quoted on Chinese ceremony, 171.
Cameron, Mr., quoted on Chinese commercial honesty, 279, 280.
Carlyle's "Frederick the Great" quoted on the goodness of human na-
ture, 317. 318.
Chang Chih-Tung, efforts of, to stop opium-smoking, 323.
memorial of, on railways, 328.
China and France compared, 146.
the Roman Empire compared, 313.
Turkey compared in treatment of women, 245.
Western lands compared, 105, 142, 143, 236, 282, 319, 320.
intercourse between, 98, 99.
golden age of, in the past, 115.
^history of, shows futility of Confucianism, 310.
reform in, 321 ff.
relation of, to Western lands, 121, 122, 314, 325, 326.
333
334 INDEX
Chinese ability to sleep anywhere, 93, 94.
adapted to all climates, 146, 147.
adultery, punishment of, 210, 211.
almanac predicts the weather, etc., 240, 241.
ancestral worship a bondage, 184.
inconsistent with Christianity, 185.
without ethical value, 310.
--and ancient Romans alike in ideas of morals, 117.
^^ and Anglo-Saxons, ability of, to receive a reproof, 80.
behavior of, in sickness, 95, 96.
when watched, 94.
compared in regard for ceremony, 102, 103.
comparison of, difficult, 14.
directness of, compared, 65, 66.
endurance of evils, 96.
filial piety of, compared, 182.
ideas of, about neighbors, 229.
crowding, 134, 135.
^ industry of, compared, ^2, 44.
misunderstand one another, 61, 62.
nerves of, compared, 92.
obstinacy of, compared, 80.
patience of, compared, 45, 46.
patriotism of, compared, 114.
politeness of, compared, 35, 36.
race vitality, 146.
^^ races, rivalry between, 14, 15, 96, 97.
salutations, 41.
settlements and taxation compared, 328, 329.
sociability, 167.
foreign dress compared, 99, 100, 125-129.
Jews compared, 154.
the United States, respect for law, compared, 238, 239.
weather contrasted, 239, 240.
animals, when dead, all eaten, 21.
articles not to be had ready-made, 25, 137, 138.
atheism of the, 292, 293.
beggars, gifts to, 191, 192.
persistence of, 154.
boys cannot learn out of school, 207.
running away from home, 203.
brides, treatment of, 198.
brothers, relations between, 227, 228.
INDEX 335
Chinese census, inexactness of, 57, 232.
suspicion of, 258.
ceremonial reverence, 300, 301.
ceremony, foreign indifference to, loi, 103.
relation of, to politeness, 35-37.
character, contradictory elements in the, 268.
difficulty of writing upon the, 10.
characters often wrongly written, 55, 56.
^J^ch'i, nature and evolution of, 218-224.
' y'^ childlessness of women occasion for divorce, etc., 179, 197, 198.
children a source of domestic strife, 217.
disobedient, 172, 173.
passive, 92.
suspicious by nature, 248, 251.
taught to be insincere, 273, 274.
troops of, everywhere, 145.
cities, filth of, 138, 139.
* civilisation and Western civilisation compared, 143.
chief inconveniences of, 139.
clannishness, 250.
classics contain much insincerity, 267.
orthodox Chinese reverence for the, 116, 117.
purity of the, 288.
quoted on filial piety, 172, 176, 179, 180.
commercial honesty of the, 279-281.
life full of suspicion, 254-256.
compared to the bamboo, 80, 81.
concubinage, cause of, 179.
concubines, treatment of, 202.
cookery, advantage of, 20.
cooking-kettles thin, 22.
corpses, extortion in case of removal of, 209.
credulity and suspicion all-prevalent, 265.
cruelty, 213-215.
cue, introduced by the Manchus, 118, 119.
currency, evils of the, 140-142.
customs, reasons for the fixity of the, 117, 12 1.
^> daughters disregarded, 183.
y^ married, avenging the wrongs of, 223.
omitted from the family registers, 199.
unwelcome, 199.
-in-law, abuse of, 201, 202, 204.
regarded as servants, 201.
33^ * INDEX
Chinese daughters-in-law, suicide of, 201, 202.
visiting their families, 199-201.
death of a, excites suspicion, 254.
debts seldom paid when due, 273.
' -deformed and unfortunate, treatment of the, 196, 197.
dialects, variations in, 48, 252.
diet simple and inexpensive, 19, 20.
disregard of hygiene, 138, 139, 148.
district-magistrate beating a prisoner, 214.
duties of a, 230-232.
.?• distrust of one another, 246-249.
divinities cheated by their worshippers, 302-304.
originally human, 290.
divorce, legal grounds for, 179.
do not care for exercise, 92, 93.
dogs, multiplicity of, 136.
dread of giving offence, 67.
dress, disadvantages of, 125-129.
early rising, 32.
education, defects of, 28.
emigration, nature of, 146, 147, 165, 166.
T-Emperor, responsibility of, to heaven, 234.
endurance of pain, 94.
eunuchs, due to suspicion, 257.
excuses, plausibility of, 71, 72, 177.
families dispersing to beg, 161.
having property in common, 2 1 7.
suspicion in, 246, 247.
'' family life deficient in sympathy, 199-202, 210.
the unit of social life, 14, 226, 227.
famine relief, 187, 190.
inadequacy of, 108, 159, 195, 196.
~> farmer, relation of, to the roads, 109-111.
work of the, 29, 30.
fatalism, 163, 164.
feasts protracted, 43.
fSng-shui KaA railways, 122, 123.
belief in, leads to suspicion of foreigners, 260.
fevers, dread of, 206.
' floods, droughts, and famine, frequency of, 96, 1 59-161.
fortune-telling, etc., 164, 309.
furniture clumsy, 131, 132.
government exemplifies suspicion, 257, 258.
INDEX 337
Chinese government, insincerity of the, 283, 284.
patriarchal, 107.
permanence of the, 117.
histories, length of, 44.
question of the veracity of, 268, 269.
houses, discomforts of, 130-134.
• ignorance of history and political economy, 165.
infanticide, 179.
infants, treatment of, when dead, 205, 206.
inns, disadvantages of, 135, 137.
insincerity and Anglo-Saxon impatience, 45, 46.
institutions, a cause of the perpetuity of, 235.
^Japanese, and Mongol worship compared, 299.
jugglers, exhibitions of, protracted, 43.
laborer, cheerfulness of the, 33, 168, 169.
poverty of the, 194.
work of the, protracted, 30.
language exhibits contempt for women, 246.
ignorance of, on the part of foreigners, 100, loi.
origin of, mysterious, 118.
vagueness of the, 82-86.
lawsuits always imminent, 96.
development of, 224, 225.
literary examinations, persistence in, 28, 29, 154.
protracted, 43, 44.
literati, the chief enemies of foreigners, 105.
literature, excellencies of, 288.
influence of, upon Chinese history, 116, 117,
longevity of the, 147, 148.
love of flowers, 167, 168.
manufactures, simple machinery for, 25.
merchants and shops, 31.
mining, abuses in, 323, 324.
modesty, true and false, 278, 279.
-money, complications of, 255.
variations in, 49, 50.
monotheism, question of, 289.
mothers and daughters, quarrels of, 199, 200.
mourning, 174, 179, 180.
names, confusion in regard to, 56, 57.
nature-worship, 290, 291.
y^ neighbors, mutual responsibility of, 228, 229.
obstinacy of the, 60, 78, 80.
33^ INDEX
Chinese officials, graduated responsibility of, 232-234.
hard-worked, 31, 32.
have no independent salaries, 235, 236.
orders of, disregarded, 78, 79.
opium-smoking, official proclamations against, 323.
overcrowding the normal condition, 94, 134, 135.
parricides infrequent, 181.
proceedings in case of, 229.
patients in hospitals and dispensaries, bearing pain, 94.
delay in coming, 87.
kindness to one another,
207.
neglect orders, 76, 77.
patriotism, nature of, 1 1 i-l 14.
peaceableness, 225.
peace-makers, 17, 221, 222, 224.
people, classification of the, 28.
polite vocabulary of, 274, 275.
polygamy, relation of, to filial piety, 184.
sanctioned by Confucianism, 308.
• population, checks on the, 145, 194.
. ^ density of the, 144-146, 152, 153, 194.
postal service, lack of, 139.
- poverty and ignorance of the, 88, 89.
prevalence of, 194, 195.
reduced to a science, 152, 153.
precedents, importance of, 123, 124.
presents, offered through politeness, 39.
reception of, 17, 276, 277.
provincial clubs, 187.
punishments, cruelty of, 213, 214.
quarrels, conduct of, 221, 222.
> race, perpetuity of, due to moral forces, 287.
y^ rate of interest due to lack of confidence, 255, 256.
rebellions allowed to gain headway, 243.
excitement in time of, 212.
punishment of participants in, 234, 235.
put down among Mohammedans, 156.
waste of life in, 144-146.
reforms prevented by conservatism, etc., 258, 259.
refugees, gifts to, 192.
-regard for human life, 211, 212, 239.
relationships complex, 226, 227.
INDEX 33d
Chinese religions imply conformity, 1 19.
intermingled, 294-296, 306, 307, 311, 312.
respect for law, 237, 238.
responsibility, evils of, 234-236.
excellencies of, 236.
relation to foreigners, 236, 237.
reviling, 219-222.
oblique, 71.
roads, character of the, 108-111, 139, 208.
- scholars, the leading class, 163.
-/ unpractical, 104.
/ school-children, methods of study and recitation, 251.
secret sects forbidden, 257, 258.
self-mutilation through filial piety, 178, 239.
servants difficult to dismiss, 247, 248.
good qualities of, 168.
mulishness of, 77, 78.
sociability, 167.
social calls, length of, 46, 47.
society, solidarity of, illustrated, 55, 227, 250, 282.
squeezes, pervasiveness of, 192.
theory of, 282,
streets, obstruction of, no, in.
superstitions, prevalence of, 296, 297.
suspicion of foreigners, 260-264.
strangers, 251-253.
suttee, practice of, 215.
sympathy, emptiness of, 279.
temples, regard for, 298-300.
theatricals protracted, 43.
tithing system, 231, 232.
tobacco, drying and curing of, 26.
travellers, treatment of, 208-210, 250, 251.
treatment of women shows suspicion, 244-246.
tribute rice, handling of, 25, 26.
uniformity and differences among the, 48.
village constable, functions of, 230.
importance of, in study of social life, 14.
the unit of social life, 226.
villages, population massed in, 244.
walls exhibit suspicion, 242-244.
weights and measures, variations in, 49-53.
widows re-marrying, 204.
340 INDEX
Chinese wives, position of, 183, 203, 204.
wives and children, sale of, 204, 205.
women, clothing of, economical, 22.
workmen, dilatoriness of, 44, 45.
writing-materials, inconvenience of, 136, 137.
Chu Hsi, influence of, upon China, 293.
Confucian and Christian theory of family relations, 183.
theory of influence of rulers on the people, 115,
Confucianism and Christianity, sacred books viewed alike, 1 16.
defects and errors of, 307-310.
moral quality of, 316.
to be estimated by its effects, 287-289, 321.
value of, 314.
Confucius and his night-dress, 129.
system, 307-312.
Ju-Pei, 267.
the truthfulness of his history, 269, 270.
Buddha, and Laotze, relations between, 296, 311, 312.
not an originator, 115.
quoted on filial piety, 175, 176.
interest in public affairs, 112.
period of three years' mourning, 174, 179, 180.
respecting spiritual beings, 184, 299.
Cooke, Mr. G. W., quoted on Chinese character, 9.
cooking, 20.
lying, 271.
Davis, Sir John, quoted on Chinese cheerfulness, T)^'
De Quincey, quoted on Chinese obstinacy, 60.
Dispensaries and hospitals in China, reports of, 149.
Drowning, neglect of, by the Chinese, 207, 208.
Elgin, Lord, address of, to Shanghai merchants, quoted, 15.
Faber, Dr. Ernst, quoted on Confucianism, 307-310.
Feathers little used by the Chinese, 131.
Foreign accomplishments, Chinese indifferent to, 103-105.
dispensaries and hospitals, suspicion towards, 263.
intercourse with China shows suspicion, 61, 263, 264.
Foreigners in China treated with indifference, 209.
Heaven inflnenced by man, 239.
worship of, by the Chinese, 291, 292.
INDEX 341
Henry, Dr. B. C, quoted on Chinese economy, 23, 24.
Hill, Rev. David, quoted on Chinese charities, 187.
Hosie, Mr., quoted on Chinese boat-trackers, 168.
Hue, M., quoted on a Chinese filial letter, 180, 181.
Chinese lack of interest in politics, 112, 113.
religion, 306.
stopping the braying of donkeys, 135.
treatment of Chinese prisoners, 214.
K'ang Hsi and the pirates, 155.
edicts of, explained to the people, 322.
Kidd, Professor, quoted on Chinese sincerity, 266.
Kingsley, life of, quoted, 320.
Legge, Dr. James, quoted on Chinese filial piety, 1 72.
Confucianism, 288.
the truthfulness of Confucius, 269, 270.
Little, Mr. A., quoted on Chinese boat-trackers, 168, 169.
length of the Chinese mile, 52.
Meadows, Mr., quoted on Chinese atheism, 293.
lack of sympathy, 279.
literature, 288.
M. Hue, 306.
studying a foreign country, 13.
Mencius and the king, 267.
quoted on filial piety, 1 78.
the feeling of pity, 186.
history by Confucius, 269.
Mohammedan rebellion in Turkestan, 156, 234.
Money, misunderstandings about, 59, 60.
Opium, effect of, upon the Chinese race, 145.
Peking Gazette, difficulty of comprehending the inwardness of the, 72, 73.
memorial in, on bad characters, 322.
filial piety, 1 78.
working copper-mines, 324.
quoted on abuse of daughters-in-law, 202.
burning alive in China, 215.
responsibility of officials, 233, 234.
Rain, antipathy of Chinese to, 139, 140.
prayers for, 297, 298, 305.
Reform in China, nature of, 79, 321 fT.
Richthofen, Baron, quoted on the Chinese character, 268.
Sacred edict expounded to produce reformation, 322.
quoted on filial piety, 174, 177.
Sickness, behavior in time of, 95, 96, 169, 206, 207.
of the poor, of women and children, neglected, 203, 205.
Singer, Dr., quoted on Chinese histories, 268.
Smallpox, Chinese indifference to, 205, 206.
r
Virtue, accounts of, kept, 187, 188.
acts of, described, 188-191.
the practice of, 186.
Wade, Sir Thomas, quoted on Chinese religion, 306.
Williams, Dr. S. W., quoted on Chinese ceremony, 171, 172.
the ideal scholar, 288.
Wool little used by the Chinese, 126.
\ Yates, Dr., quoted on Chinese filial piety, 172, 184.
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